Abstract
Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) prostheses were modified to produce two types of composite porosity PTFE grafts: type I - inner 60 μm/outer 20 μm and type II - inner 20 μm/outer 60 μm. These composite porosity PTFE designs were investigated for bleed through, graft healing and patency and compared with high porosity PTFE (60 μm) and standard PTFE (20 μm) grafts. The grafts were implanted into the carotid and femoral arteries of dogs and retrieved after 4, 12 and 18 weeks. Both composite porosity grafts showed significantly less bleed through than standard and high porosity grafts after reperfusion. In composite grafts, the 60-μm layer allowed fibrovascular tissue and histiocyte ingrowth from perigraft tissue, but the 20-μm layer did not. Neointima formation occurred earlier and endothelialization was more extensive in high porosity grafts, but seroma formation occurred in 25% of cases. In type I composite porosity grafts, smooth muscle cells of neointima migrated into the pores of the graft, providing a firmly anchored intima. Type II composite porosity grafts allowed better ingrowth of fibrovascular tissue at the outer layer from the perigraft tissue; however, endothelialization was not completed. Composite porosity grafts should be considered for evaluation in specific clinical situations.
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