Author:
Hartley Adam,Afoke Jonathan,Liu Guiqing,Owen Samuel,Hajhosseiny Reza,Hassen Kimberly,Punjabi Prakash,Haskard Dorian,Shalhoub Joseph,Khamis Ramzi
Abstract
AbstractThe preclinical study of atherosclerosis has traditionally centred around the use of small animal models, translating to large animal models, prior to first-in-man studies. We propose to disrupt this paradigm by designing an ex vivo pump perfused human limb model. The novel model consists of taking a freshly amputated limb and incorporating it into an ex situ pump-perfused bypass system (akin to extracorporeal membrane oxygenation), circulating warmed, oxygenated blood. The circuit incorporates an introducer sheath and guiding catheter for intravascular imaging and X-ray angiography. Regular monitoring is performed using blood gas analysis, aiming for physiological parameters. The model maintains oxygen saturations > 99% for the length of perfusion (up to 6-h). Clinical grade X-ray angiography, intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography have been successfully performed. Indocyanine green, a near-infrared fluorescent dye that localises to atherosclerotic plaque, has been injected into the system and left to circulate for 90-min. Fluorescence reflectance imaging of the dissected arterial bed confirmed uptake in areas of calcific atherosclerotic plaque on intravascular imaging. This is the first demonstration of an ex vivo pump-perfused “living” limb experimental model of atherosclerosis, which shows promise for future studies in translational interventional imaging and molecular targeting.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC