Literature DB >> 33063918

Pulmonary artery and lung parenchymal growth following early versus delayed stent interventions in a swine pulmonary artery stenosis model.

Ryan Pewowaruk1, Joshua Hermsen2,3, Cody Johnson4, Alexandra Erdmann2, Kevin Pettit2, Scott Aesif2,5, J Carter Ralphe2,6, Christopher J Francois2,4, Alejandro Roldán-Alzate1,4,7, Luke Lamers2,6.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Compare lung parenchymal and pulmonary artery (PA) growth and hemodynamics following early and delayed PA stent interventions for treatment of unilateral branch PA stenosis (PAS) in swine.
BACKGROUND: How the pulmonary circulation remodels in response to different durations of hypoperfusion and how much growth and function can be recovered with catheter directed interventions at differing time periods of lung development is not understood.
METHODS: A total of 18 swine were assigned to four groups: Sham (n = 4), untreated left PAS (LPAS) (n = 4), early intervention (EI) (n = 5), and delayed intervention (DI) (n = 5). EI had left pulmonary artery (LPA) stenting at 5 weeks (6 kg) with redilation at 10 weeks. DI had stenting at 10 weeks. All underwent right heart catheterization, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and histology at 20 weeks (55 kg).
RESULTS: EI decreased the extent of histologic changes in the left lung as DI had marked alveolar septal and bronchovascular abnormalities (p = .05 and p < .05 vs. sham) that were less prevalent in EI. EI also increased left lung volumes and alveolar counts compared to DI. EI and DI equally restored LPA pulsatility, R heart pressures, and distal LPA growth. EI and DI improved, but did not normalize LPA stenosis diameter (LPA/DAo ratio: Sham 1.27 ± 0.11 mm/mm, DI 0.88 ± 0.10 mm/mm, EI 1.01 ± 0.09 mm/mm) and pulmonary blood flow distributions (LPA-flow%: Sham 52 ± 5%, LPAS 7 ± 2%, DI 44 ± 3%, EI 40 ± 2%).
CONCLUSION: In this surgically created PAS model, EI was associated with improved lung parenchymal development compared to DI. Longer durations of L lung hypoperfusion did not detrimentally affect PA growth and R heart hemodynamics. Functional and anatomical discrepancies persist despite successful stent interventions that warrant additional investigation.
© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  congenital heart disease; pediatric interventions; pulmonary artery stenting

Year:  2020        PMID: 33063918     DOI: 10.1002/ccd.29326

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Catheter Cardiovasc Interv        ISSN: 1522-1946            Impact factor:   2.692


  3 in total

1.  Non-invasive MRI Derived Hemodynamic Simulation to Predict Successful vs. Unsuccessful Catheter Interventions for Branch Pulmonary Artery Stenosis: Proof-of-Concept and Experimental Validation in Swine.

Authors:  Ryan Pewowaruk; John Ralphe; Luke Lamers; Alejandro Roldán-Alzate
Journal:  Cardiovasc Eng Technol       Date:  2021-05-18       Impact factor: 2.305

2.  Accelerated Estimation of Pulmonary Artery Stenosis Pressure Gradients with Distributed Lumped Parameter Modeling vs. 3D CFD with Instantaneous Adaptive Mesh Refinement: Experimental Validation in Swine.

Authors:  Ryan Pewowaruk; Luke Lamers; Alejandro Roldán-Alzate
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2021-05-04       Impact factor: 4.219

3.  Longitudinal Evolution of Pulmonary Artery Wall Shear Stress in a Swine Model of Pulmonary Artery Stenosis and Stent Interventions.

Authors:  Ryan Pewowaruk; Luke Lamers; Alejandro Roldán-Alzate
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2021-01-04       Impact factor: 4.219

  3 in total

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