| Literature DB >> 35335519 |
Horațiu Moldovan1,2, Iulian Antoniac3, Daniela Gheorghiță3, Maria Sabina Safta1,2, Silvia Preda1,2, Marian Broască1, Elisabeta Badilă2, Oana Fronea2, Alexandru Scafa-Udrişte1,2, Mihai Cacoveanu1, Adrian Molnar4,5, Victor Sebastian Costache6,7, Ondin Zaharia2,8.
Abstract
Intraoperative haemostasis is of paramount importance in the practice of cardiovascular surgery. Over the past 70 years, topical haemostatic methods have advanced significantly and today we deal with various haemostatic agents with different properties and different mechanisms of action. The particularity of coagulation mechanisms after extracorporeal circulation, has encouraged the introduction of new types of topic agents to achieve haemostasis, where conventional methods prove their limits. These products have an important role in cardiac, as well as in vascular, surgery, mainly in major vascular procedures, like aortic dissections and aortic aneurysms. This article presents those agents used for topical application and the mechanism of haemostasis and offers general recommendations for their use in the operating room.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; cardiovascular surgery; coagulation; haemostasis; haemostatic agents
Year: 2022 PMID: 35335519 PMCID: PMC8955858 DOI: 10.3390/polym14061189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Schematic representation of coagulation cascade.
Figure 2Bleeding management using haemostatic agents.
Classification of commercial haemostatic agents based on component used.
| Commercial Haemostatic Agents | ||
|---|---|---|
| I. Without Human or Bovine Component | Commercial name | Specifications/Composition |
| Surgicel | Oxidized cellulose polymer | |
| Oxycel | ||
| Omnex | Synthetic tissue adhesive (Cyanoacrylates) | |
| Coseal | Combination of two polyethylene glycol polymers | |
| Arista | Microporous polysaccharide hemispheres | |
| Hem Con | Freeze-dried chitosan derived from shrimp shellContains chitosan | |
| Chitoseal | ||
| Celox | ||
| Recothrom | Recombinant thrombin (topical use) | |
| II. With Bovine Component | BioGlue | Bovine albumin, and glutaraldehyde |
| CoStasis | Bovine collagen, bovine thrombin, and calcium chloride mixed with autologous plasma at the time of surgery | |
| Thrombin | Bovine protein | |
| Avitene | Water-insoluble acid salts of bovine collagen | |
| Colgel | ||
| Helitene | ||
| III. With Human Plasma Component | Tisseel | Human thrombin and fibrinogen, synthetic aprotinin |
| Vivostat | Combination of platelets and autologous fibrin (prepare on site) | |
| Crosseal | Tranexamic acid, human plasma protein, thrombin | |
| Quixil | ||
| IV. With Bovine and Human plasma component | Floseal | Human thrombin and bovine gelatine |
| Beriplast | Human thrombin and fibrinogen, bovine aprotinin | |
Figure 3Intraoperative aspect of bleeding management using TachoSill.
Figure 4Intraoperative aspect of Fibrilar oxidised cellulose.
Figure 5Chemical formulas of 2-octyl cyanoacrylate and butyl lactoyl cyanoacrylate.
Figure 6Chemical structures of chitin and chitosan.
Figure 7SEM results on the experimental samples collagen based loaded with gelatin microspheres ((A) sample A—0% gelatin, (B) sample B—4% gelatin, (C) sample C—21% gelatin, and (D) sample D—41% gelatin): general view (magnification 25×) and the interface aspects between collagen fibrils and gelatin microspheres (magnification 250×).
Figure 8AFM 3D Images on the experimental samples collagen based loaded with gelatin microspheres: (a) sample A—0% gelatin (10 μm × 10 μm, z-range = 500 nm); (b) sample B—4% gelatin (10 μm × 10 μm, z-range = 1.5 µm); (c) sample C—21% gelatin (3 μm × 3 μm, z-range = 300 nm), and (d) sample D—41% gelatin (3 μm × 3 μm, z-range = 500 nm).