Intimal hyperplasia following implantation of helical-centreline and straight-centreline stents in common carotid arteries in healthy pigs: Influence of intraluminal flow

Colin Gerald Caro, Anusha Seneviratne, Kevin B. Heraty, Claudia Monaco, Martin G. Burke, Rob Krams, Carlos C. Chang, Gianfilippo Coppola, Paul Gilson

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

39 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Intimal hyperplasia (IH) is a leading cause of obstruction of vascular interventions, including arterial stents, bypass grafts and arteriovenous grafts and fistulae. Proposals to account for arterial stent-associated IH include wall damage, low wall shear stress (WSS), disturbed flow and, although not widely recognized, wall hypoxia. The common non-planarity of arterial geometry and flow, led us to develop a bare-metal, nitinol, self-expanding stent with three-dimensional helical-centreline geometry. This was deployed in one common carotid artery of healthy pigs, with a straight-centreline, but otherwise identical (conventional) stent deployed contralaterally. Both stent types deformed the arteries, but the helical-centreline device additionally deformed themhelically and caused swirling of intraluminal flow. At sacrifice, one month post stent deployment, histology revealed significantly less IH in the helical-centreline than straight-centreline stented vessels. Medial crosssectional area was not significantly different in helical-centreline than straight-centreline stented vessels. By contrast, luminal cross-sectional area was significantly larger in helical-centreline than straight-centreline stented vessels.Mechanisms considered to account for those results include enhanced intraluminal WSS and enhanced intraluminal blood-vessel wall mass transport, including of oxygen, in the helical-centreline stented vessels. Consistent with the latter proposal, adventitial microvessel density was lower in the helical-centreline stented than straight-centreline stented vessels.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of the Royal Society Interface
Volume10
Issue number89
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Dec 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Blood-wall oxygen transport
  • Helical-centreline arterial stent
  • Intimal hyperplasia
  • Swirling intraluminal blood flow
  • Vessel wall hypoxia
  • Wall shear stress

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