Affiliation:
1. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, SUNY Health Science Center, Syracuse, New York, USA
Abstract
Knowledge of the initial time required to repair the endothelial surface of small vessels after microsurgical vascular anastomosis of veins and arteries is required to determine the preferable duration of antiplatelet prophylaxis and anticoagulation after emergency or elective microsurgery. To determine this, the femoral arteries and veins of 16 Sprague-Dawley rats were isolated, sectioned and repaired with microsurgical technique. The animals were then killed at one day intervals from the first to the 16th postoperative day. Femoral veins and arteries were harvested, sectioned and prepared for scanning electron microscopy. The results show that endothelialization of the repair line is begun by day 3 and completed by day 7 in the veins and arteries. Endothelialization of the intraluminal protruding sutures takes nine days in the veins while it is only starting at day 15 in the arteries. If this model can be extended to the human clinical situation, antiplatelet prophylaxis or anticoagulation should be administered for at least seven days. Further study is required to evaluate the thrombogenic potential of intraluminal protruding sutures.
Cited by
2 articles.
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