| Literature DB >> 24507720 |
Jin Huang, Jinquan Shuang, Guanyin Xiong, Xiang Wang, Yin Zhang, Xiaowei Tang, Zhining Fan1, Yingzhou Shen, Hanming Song, Zhi Liu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stents are recommended in patients with dysphagia caused by esophageal stricture, but an ideal stent does not currently exist. Thus, studies on new esophageal stents are necessary, and suitable animal models are desperately needed for these studies. The aim of this study was to establish a model of malignant esophageal stricture in rabbit for studies on stent innovation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24507720 PMCID: PMC3922539 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-12-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1Stent and its delivery system. (A) The delivery system for the stent. (B) The self-expandable metal stent is 8 mm in diameter and 25 mm in length, and its partial length is covered with a silicone membrane.
Figure 2Procedure for stent placement. (A) Fluoroscopy showed a malignant stricture (black arrow) in the thoracic esophagus of a rabbit. The endoscope (yellow arrow) was used for injection of the contrast. (B) Fluoroscopic view of the stent implanted at the desired location, which was also confirmed using an endoscope (yellow arrow). (C) Endoscopic view of the tumor intra-luminal growth (yellow arrow); the esophageal lumen was on the right of the tumor (black arrow). (D) After stent placement, the endoscopic view of the stent at an ideal location revealed that the tumor was outside of stent, but within the extension of the stent (yellow arrow).
Figure 3Tumor development. (A) Endoscopic view of tumor growth one week after implantation (black arrow). (B) Microscopy confirmed the tumor growth.
Figure 4Degree of esophagostenosis. The endoscopic follow-up showed (A) a mild stricture in a rabbit; (B) a moderate stricture in a rabbit; (C) a severe stricture in a rabbit. In the image, the black arrows indicate the tumors and the yellow arrows indicate the esophageal lumen.
Figure 5Complications of stent placement. (A) During stent implantation, fluoroscopic view of stent migration to the stomach in a rabbit. (B) Endoscopic view of the esophageal re-stenosis at the distal stent in an animal model three weeks after stent placement.
Figure 6Survival curve of the rabbits with severe esophagostenosis. Graph of Kaplan–Meier survival analysis showing a significant survival benefit (P < 0.05) for models with stent placement (blue curve), compared to those without stent deployment, but similarly demonstrated severe esophagostenosis (green curve).