Can a Peritoneal Conduit Become an Artery?

Objective: Current vascular grafts all have limitations. This study examined peritoneum as a potential graft material and the in vivo transfer of peritoneum into a functional artery like conduit after end to end anastomosis into the common carotid artery of sheep. The aim was to investigate whether...

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Main Authors: Petter Davik, Zuzana Chabadova, Martin Altreuther, Ingeborg Leinan, Sashidar Bandaru, Levent M. Akyürek, Erney Mattsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:EJVES Vascular Forum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666688X20300708
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spelling doaj-b363487daf154faabc357f5b0f9bf6642020-12-30T04:24:18ZengElsevierEJVES Vascular Forum2666-688X2020-01-01492329Can a Peritoneal Conduit Become an Artery?Petter Davik0Zuzana Chabadova1Martin Altreuther2Ingeborg Leinan3Sashidar Bandaru4Levent M. Akyürek5Erney Mattsson6Department of Surgery, St Olavs Hospital, Trondheim, Norway; Department of Clinical and Molecular Medicine, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway; Corresponding author. St Olavs Hospital and the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Prinsesse Kristinas gt 3, 7030, Trondheim, Norway.Institute for Circulation and Imaging (ISB) at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, NorwayDepartment of Vascular Surgery, St Olavs Hospital, Trondheim, NorwayInstitute for Circulation and Imaging (ISB) at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, NorwayDepartment of Laboratory Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, SwedenDepartment of Laboratory Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, SwedenInstitute for Circulation and Imaging (ISB) at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway; Department of Vascular Surgery, St Olavs Hospital, Trondheim, NorwayObjective: Current vascular grafts all have limitations. This study examined peritoneum as a potential graft material and the in vivo transfer of peritoneum into a functional artery like conduit after end to end anastomosis into the common carotid artery of sheep. The aim was to investigate whether implantation of a peritoneal tube into the arterial tree results in a structure with function, histological findings, and gene expression like an artery, and whether such arterialisation occurs through a conversion of the phenotype of peritoneal cells or from host cell migration into the implant. Methods: Peritoneum with adherent rectus aponeurosis from sheep was used to form tubular vascular grafts that were implanted into the common carotid artery of six sheep, then removed after five months. Two sheep received allogenic peritoneal grafts and four sheep received autologous peritoneal grafts. Results: One sheep died shortly after implantation, so five of the six sheep were followed. Five months after implantation, four of the five remaining grafts were patent. Three of four patent grafts were aneurysmal. The four patent grafts had developed an endothelial layer indistinguishable from that of the adjacent normal artery, and a medial layer with smooth muscle cells with a surrounding adventitia. The new conduit displayed vasomotor function not present at the time of implantation. DNA genotyping showed that the media in the new conduit consisted of recipient smooth muscle cells. Little difference in mRNA expression was demonstrated between the post-implantation conduit and normal artery. Conclusion: During a five month implantation period in the arterial system, peritoneum converted into a tissue that histologically and functionally resembled a normal artery, with a functional genetic expression that resembled that of an artery. Single nucleotide polymorphism analysis indicated that this conversion occurs through host cell migration into the graft.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666688X20300708Aneurysm modelArterial graftPeritoneal graftTissue plasticityVascular scaffold
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Petter Davik
Zuzana Chabadova
Martin Altreuther
Ingeborg Leinan
Sashidar Bandaru
Levent M. Akyürek
Erney Mattsson
spellingShingle Petter Davik
Zuzana Chabadova
Martin Altreuther
Ingeborg Leinan
Sashidar Bandaru
Levent M. Akyürek
Erney Mattsson
Can a Peritoneal Conduit Become an Artery?
EJVES Vascular Forum
Aneurysm model
Arterial graft
Peritoneal graft
Tissue plasticity
Vascular scaffold
author_facet Petter Davik
Zuzana Chabadova
Martin Altreuther
Ingeborg Leinan
Sashidar Bandaru
Levent M. Akyürek
Erney Mattsson
author_sort Petter Davik
title Can a Peritoneal Conduit Become an Artery?
title_short Can a Peritoneal Conduit Become an Artery?
title_full Can a Peritoneal Conduit Become an Artery?
title_fullStr Can a Peritoneal Conduit Become an Artery?
title_full_unstemmed Can a Peritoneal Conduit Become an Artery?
title_sort can a peritoneal conduit become an artery?
publisher Elsevier
series EJVES Vascular Forum
issn 2666-688X
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Objective: Current vascular grafts all have limitations. This study examined peritoneum as a potential graft material and the in vivo transfer of peritoneum into a functional artery like conduit after end to end anastomosis into the common carotid artery of sheep. The aim was to investigate whether implantation of a peritoneal tube into the arterial tree results in a structure with function, histological findings, and gene expression like an artery, and whether such arterialisation occurs through a conversion of the phenotype of peritoneal cells or from host cell migration into the implant. Methods: Peritoneum with adherent rectus aponeurosis from sheep was used to form tubular vascular grafts that were implanted into the common carotid artery of six sheep, then removed after five months. Two sheep received allogenic peritoneal grafts and four sheep received autologous peritoneal grafts. Results: One sheep died shortly after implantation, so five of the six sheep were followed. Five months after implantation, four of the five remaining grafts were patent. Three of four patent grafts were aneurysmal. The four patent grafts had developed an endothelial layer indistinguishable from that of the adjacent normal artery, and a medial layer with smooth muscle cells with a surrounding adventitia. The new conduit displayed vasomotor function not present at the time of implantation. DNA genotyping showed that the media in the new conduit consisted of recipient smooth muscle cells. Little difference in mRNA expression was demonstrated between the post-implantation conduit and normal artery. Conclusion: During a five month implantation period in the arterial system, peritoneum converted into a tissue that histologically and functionally resembled a normal artery, with a functional genetic expression that resembled that of an artery. Single nucleotide polymorphism analysis indicated that this conversion occurs through host cell migration into the graft.
topic Aneurysm model
Arterial graft
Peritoneal graft
Tissue plasticity
Vascular scaffold
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666688X20300708
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