Abstract

Abstract

Decellularization is a proven approach to decelerate the degenerative processes which lead to the failure of heart valve implants. In order to further delay the calcifying in vivo degeneration of tissue-engineered grafts, antiarteriosclerotic and antiinflammatory substances may be advantageous, and some in vitro reports on HMGCoA reductase inhibitors have shown encouraging results, whereas clinical trials have failed to prove a positive in vivo result. Male Wistar rats (recipients) underwent an interventional generation of aortic insufficiency grade II – III (day -14) and were fed with a procalcific diet of high-dose vitamin D, cholesterol and calciumphosphate, additionally supplemented with simvastatin (group S; n = 6). Identically treated animals fed with the same diet, not supplemented with simvastatin, served as controls (group C; n = 6). Aortic conduits of Sprague-Dawley rats (donors) were decellularized according to a detergent-based protocol and infrarenally implanted (day 0) in an end-to-side manner in the recipients. Echocardiography, doppler sonography of the implant and blood serum analyses were conducted at days -14, 0 and 28. Graft explantation, histological and immunohistochemical analyses as well as quantitative real time PCR were performed after 4 weeks. Acute AI grade II – III with echocardiographically confirmed reversed diastolic flow in the whole aorta caused significant left ventricular (LV) dilatation as well as decrease of LV ejection fraction (p <0.001 at day 28) and resulted in a mortality of 8%. Sonographic competence of the conduit perfusion and overall survival of the transplanted rats were 100%. After 4 weeks of simvastatin treatment, calcification of the implants was significantly lower in group C (p < 0.01), whereas especially the aortic valve and the ascending aorta were strained by a decreased calcium burden (vonKossa staining). Histological evaluation of the conduit implants revealed an intimal hyperplasia, involving α-smooth muscle actin expressing cells, with an increased intima-to-media ratio (p < 0.05) in the aortic walls of group S and in the aortic valves of group C. RNA analysis by quantitative PCR was performed to confirm these results. The present study in a standardized rat transplantation model failed to show an early benefit of the HMGCoA reductase inhibitor simvastatin to diminish the calcification of decellularized aortic conduit implants. Furthermore, existing literature in this field is contradictory, and therefore, further experiments with more detailed analyses and long-term observations are warranted.

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/content/papers/10.5339/qproc.2012.heartvalve.4.26
2012-05-01
2024-03-29
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