Characterization of a rodent model for the study of arterial microanastomoses with size discrepancy (small-to-large)

2009 
Microsurgical autotransplantation of tissues is employed clinically to reconstruct defects following burns, trauma and surgical cancer ablation, and to correct congenital abnormalities. Transplant vessels of <3 mm are anastomosed by hand under the microscope. Experimentally, anastomotic patency rates decrease with increasing vessel diameter mismatch, and clinically, ratios of 3:1 or greater lead to unacceptably low arterial patency rates. A number of surgical techniques for dealing with size mismatch are described, but no one method has found favour, and few controlled studies of technique are reported. In this report, a rodent superficial caudal epigastric artery (SCEA)/femoral artery (FA) model for the study of these techniques is described in detail. The diameter ratio between these vessels lies in the clinically relevant range of 1:1.5–1:2.5. In the male Wistar rat, external vessel diameters were not found to increase markedly in size between animal weights of 300 and 500 g. The length of FA distal to...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    19
    References
    8
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []