Surgical correction of a ventricular septal defect in a child with spinal muscular atrophy type 2 treated with nusinersen sodium: a case report

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a severe, inherited neuromuscular disorder characterized by progressive muscle weakness and atrophy. Cardiac pathology co-existence is reported more frequently in the severely …  Read More

Preoperative pericardial hematoma in patients with acute type A aortic dissection (AAAD): Do we need an adjusted treatment?

An acute type A aortic dissection (AAAD) is a critical emergency and remains one of the most challenging diseases in cardiothoracic surgery. The existence of a pericardial hematoma caused by an aortic rupture …  Read More

In vivo efficacy of a polymer layered decellularized matrix composite as a cell honing cardiovascular tissue substitute

Mater Today Bio. 2022 Oct 23;17:100451. doi: 10.1016/j.mtbio.2022.100451. eCollection 2022 Dec 15.

ABSTRACT

Cardiovascular surgery involves reconstruction of tissues that are under cyclical mechanical loading, and in constant contact with pulsatile blood flow. Durable biomaterials for such tissue reconstruction are scarce, as they need to be mechanically strong, hemocompatible, and resist structural deterioration from calcification. While homografts are ideal, they are scarce; xenografts are immunogenic and rendered inactive from glutaraldehyde fixation, causing them to calficy and structurally deteriorate over time; decellularized xenografts are devoid of cells, mechanically weak; and synthetic polymeric scaffolds are thrombogenic or too dense to enable host cell infiltration. In this work, we report the in vivo feasibility of a new polymer-decellularized matrix composite material (decellularized bovine pericardium-polycaprolactone: chitosan) fabricated by electrospinning, which is designed to be mechanically strong and achieve programmed host cell honing to integrate into the host. In a rodent and sheep model, this new material was found to be hemocompatible, and enabled host cell infiltration into the polymer and the decellularized matrix core underlying the polymer. Presence of M2 macrophages and several vascular cell types, with matrix remodeling in the vicinity of the cells was observed in the explanted tissues. In summary, the proposed composite material is a novel approach to create in-situ host integrating tissue substitutes, with better non-thrombogenicity, reduced infections and endocarditis, and potentially the ability to grow with the patient and remodeling into a native tissue structure.

PMID:36444341 | PMC:PMC9700326 | DOI:10.1016/j.mtbio.2022.100451

Easy surgical explantation technique for sutureless Perceval S prosthesis, ‘lasso technique’: a case report

Due to structural valve deterioration of sutureless aortic prosthesis, there is a need for explantation of the prothesis. We introduce a surgical technique to explant sutureless aortic prosthesis, which has a …  Read More

Pericardial tamponade, a diagnostic chameleon: from the historical perspectives to contemporary management

Pericardial tamponade (PT) early after cardiac surgery is a challenging clinical entity, not infrequently misrecognized and often only detected late in its course. Because the clinical signs of pericardial tam…  Read More

In vivo efficacy of a polymer layered decellularized matrix composite as a cell honing cardiovascular tissue substitute

Mater Today Bio. 2022 Oct 23;17:100451. doi: 10.1016/j.mtbio.2022.100451. eCollection 2022 Dec 15.

ABSTRACT

Cardiovascular surgery involves reconstruction of tissues that are under cyclical mechanical loading, and in constant contact with pulsatile blood flow. Durable biomaterials for such tissue reconstruction are scarce, as they need to be mechanically strong, hemocompatible, and resist structural deterioration from calcification. While homografts are ideal, they are scarce; xenografts are immunogenic and rendered inactive from glutaraldehyde fixation, causing them to calficy and structurally deteriorate over time; decellularized xenografts are devoid of cells, mechanically weak; and synthetic polymeric scaffolds are thrombogenic or too dense to enable host cell infiltration. In this work, we report the in vivo feasibility of a new polymer-decellularized matrix composite material (decellularized bovine pericardium-polycaprolactone: chitosan) fabricated by electrospinning, which is designed to be mechanically strong and achieve programmed host cell honing to integrate into the host. In a rodent and sheep model, this new material was found to be hemocompatible, and enabled host cell infiltration into the polymer and the decellularized matrix core underlying the polymer. Presence of M2 macrophages and several vascular cell types, with matrix remodeling in the vicinity of the cells was observed in the explanted tissues. In summary, the proposed composite material is a novel approach to create in-situ host integrating tissue substitutes, with better non-thrombogenicity, reduced infections and endocarditis, and potentially the ability to grow with the patient and remodeling into a native tissue structure.

PMID:36444341 | PMC:PMC9700326 | DOI:10.1016/j.mtbio.2022.100451

Pericardial tamponade, a diagnostic chameleon: from the historical perspectives to contemporary management

Pericardial tamponade (PT) early after cardiac surgery is a challenging clinical entity, not infrequently misrecognized and often only detected late in its course. Because the clinical signs of pericardial tam…  Read More

S100B predicts neurological injury and 30-day mortality following surgery for acute type A aortic dissection: an observational cohort study

Neurological injuries are frequent following Acute Type A Aortic Dissection (ATAAD) repair occurring in 4–30% of all patients. Our objective was to study whether S100B can predict neurological injury following…  Read More