| Literature DB >> 21331604 |
Ning Ma1, Zhenyu Wang, Hao Chen, Yanjun Sun, Haifa Hong, Qi Sun, Meng Yin, Jinfen Liu.
Abstract
To accelerate the fabrication of thick-walled autologous tissue-engineered vascular grafts (TEVGs), a novel biotube inserting technique was developed. After 2 weeks of subcutaneous embedding in rabbits, silicone rods (diameter, 3 mm; length, 35 mm) became encapsulated in connective tissues. Single-layered biotubes were obtained after removing the silicone rods. One silicone rod encapsulated in tissues was inserted into a single-layered biotube to form two layers of autologous tubular tissues. Three layers of autologous tubular tissues were also obtained by applying the same technique. Following a 2-week re-embedding procedure, two layers or three layers of autologous tubular tissues were integrated to form two-layered or three-layered TEVGs. Both wall thickness and burst pressure of three-layered TEVGs were significantly higher than those of two-layered and single-layered TEVGs (P < 0.05). The two-layered TEVGs could be applied as small-caliber vascular grafts, and three-layered TEVGs could be applied as medium- or large-caliber vascular grafts.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21331604 DOI: 10.1007/s10856-011-4257-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Sci Mater Med ISSN: 0957-4530 Impact factor: 3.896