Small-intestine submucosa (SIS) is cell-free collagen, 100 mu thick, derived from the small intestine. It has been used as a vascular graft and has the highly desirable property of remodeling itself to become host tissue. To date there has been limited reporting on its preimplantation mechanical properties as a vascular graft. In this study, compliance, elastic modulus, and burst pressure have been measured on 5- and 8-mm SIS grafts. The compliance (percent of diameter increase for a pressure rise from 80 to 120 mmHg) was 4.6% av (range 2.9 to 8.6%) for the 5-mm grafts. For the 8-mm graft, the increase in diameter for the same pressure rise was 8.7% av (range 7.2 to 9.5%). The modulus of elasticity (E) increased exponentially with increasing pressure according to E = E(o)e(alphaP), where Eo is the zero-pressure modulus and alpha is the exponent that describes the rate of increase in E with pressure; the units for E, Eo, and P are g/cm2. The mean value for Eo was 4106 (g/cm2 range 1348-5601). The mean value for alpha was 0.0059 (range 0.0028-0.0125). At 100 mmHg, the mean value for E was 8.91 x 10(3) g/cm2 (range 1.02-8.80 x 10(3)). The mean burst pressure for 5.5-mm grafts was 3517 mm Hg (range 2069-4654). In terms of preimplant compliance, the small-diameter SIS graft is about (1/2) as compliant as the dog carotid artery, about four times more compliant than a typical vein graft, and more than an order of magnitude more compliant than synthetic vascular grafts.
The purpose of this study was to report the longitudinal angiographic evaluation of prefabricated lyophilized small-intestinal submucosa (SIS) grafts placed in ovine carotid arteries and to demonstrate a variety of complications that developed. A total of 24 grafts, 10 cm long and 6 mm in diameter, were placed surgically as interposition grafts. Graft patency at 1 week was evaluated by Doppler ultrasound, and angiography was used for follow-up at 1 month and at 3 to 4 months. A 90% patency rate was found at 1 week, 65% at 1 month, and 30% at 3 to 4 months. On the patent grafts, angiography demonstrated a variety of changes, such as anastomotic stenoses, graft diffuse dilations and dissections, and aneurysm formation. These findings have not been previously demonstrated angiographically by other investigators reporting results with small-diameter vessel grafts made from fresh small-intestinal submucosa (SIS). The complications found were partially related to the graft construction from four SIS layers. Detailed longitudinal angiographic study should become an essential part of any future evaluation of small-vessel SIS grafting.
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