A Morphometric Study of Vein Graft Intimal Hyperplasia

Abstract
The extent of intimal hyperplasia in veins grafted into arteries is a major determinant of graft survival. The development of intimal hyperplasia in experimental ilio-lumbar vein grafts in iliac arteries of 36 rats was followed by light microscopy between 2 and 140 days after grafting. The increase in mean thickness of the graft intima was most rapid from 2 to 21 days and then more gradual to reach a maximum at 140 days, when the graft intima was the same thickness as the combined intima and media of the control artery. Grafts aged between 15 and 28 days showed a significant thickening at the anastomosis, but this was not evident in older grafts. Our results quantitate the arterialization of a vein graft and show that there is no significant anastomotic intimal hyperplasia in mature grafts in this model.

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