| Literature DB >> 1863586 |
R J Mehran1, M A Ricci, A M Graham, K Carter, J F Symes.
Abstract
Models for the study of prosthetic vascular graft infection have been studied frequently in the dog and rabbit. We have developed a reproducible swine model to study this problem and its treatment. The cardiovascular system, healing characteristics, and the bloodstream clearance of bacteria in swine more closely resembles those of humans than do other animal models. The low cost and availability of the swine is an additional attractive aspect. One hundred fifty-six farm-bred pigs have undergone infrarenal aortic replacement with a 3-cm segment of 6-mm prosthetic graft over the past two years. Graft infection was produced by (1) direct inoculation of 10(6) Staphylococcus aureus at the time of the surgery or (2) intravenous infusion of bacteria (10(2)-10(6) organisms/mL) immediately after surgery. All animals were sacrificed 1 to 4 weeks later, depending on the study design. Cultures, histology, and electron microscopy were performed on each graft. Anesthetic complications were rare (2.5%). Postoperative complications leading to animal death decreased with increasing experience (11.5%), but included graft thrombosis, bleeding, sepsis, intussusception, and colonic ischemia. Wound infection was the most common cause of morbidity. The swine model is an attractive alternative to that of other animals for the study of prosthetic vascular graft infections. Further details of the operative technique and the comparison to the human and other animal models is discussed.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1863586 DOI: 10.3109/08941939109140760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invest Surg ISSN: 0894-1939 Impact factor: 2.533