Author:
Chlupáč J,Filová E,Bačáková L
Abstract
The gold standard material in bypass surgery of blood vessels
remains the patient’s own artery or vein. However, this material
may be unavailable, or may suffer vein graft disease. Currently
available vascular prostheses, namely polyethylene terephthalate
(PET, Dacron) and expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE),
perform well as large-caliber replacements, but their long-term
patency is discouraging in small-caliber applications (<6 mm),
such as in coronary, crural or microvessel surgery. This failure is
mainly a result of an unfavorable healing process with surface
thrombogenicity, due to lack of endothelial cells and anastomotic
intimal hyperplasia caused by hemodynamic disturbances. An
ideal small-diameter vascular graft has become a major focus of
research. Novel biomaterials have been manufactured, and
tissue-biomaterial interactions have been optimized. Tissue
engineering technology has proven that the concept of partially
or totally living blood vessels is feasible. The purpose of this
review is to outline the vascular graft materials that are currently
being implanted, taking into account cell-biomaterial physiology,
tissue engineering approaches and the collective achievements of
the authors.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
328 articles.
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