A Study of the Cells in the Explanted Viable Cryopreserved Allograft Valve
- 1 September 1988
- journal article
- Published by Hindawi Limited in Journal of Cardiac Surgery
- Vol. 3 (3S) , 279-287
- https://doi.org/10.1111/jocs.1988.3.3s.279
Abstract
From June 1975 to December 1987, 231 patients underwent aortic valve replacement with a viable cryopreserved allograft aortic valve. Throughout this era, a uniform procurement and preservation was used to maintain leaflet fibroblast viability. The allograft valve was obtained from coronor's autopsies within 24 hours of death, and more recently from organ donors, incubated for 24 hours in low dose antibiotic solution followed immediately by cryopreservation (mean time interval 39 hours after donor death). Viability was ensured by monitoring glucose utilization of the aortic and pulmonary valves and by demonstrating fibroblast growth in tissue cultured from the pulmonary valve. A uniform protocol for valve preparation was used during the entire experience. Nine allograft aortic valves have been obtained by eight reoperations (two were for leaflet degeneration) and one autopsy. The time intervals from implantation to explantation were 2 months, 10 months, 20 months, 22 months, 2.2 years, 5 years, 8.3 years, 9.2 years, and 10.8 years. Histologic examination of the leaflet tissue disclosed a variable degree of cellularity, ranging from a highly cellular matrix (9.2 years) to minimal cellularity (20 months). Within the same valve (10 months), one leaflet was completely acellular with a moderate degree of cellularity in the other two leaflets. The competent valve recovered at autopsy (8.2 years) was essentially acellular. Fibroblasts could consistently be cultured from leaflets in which viable cells were seen histologically. Chromosomal analysis of cultured cells from a valve leaflet (9.2 years) that was implanted with a donor and recipient sex mismatch demonstrated persistence of donor cells. These findings are different from those of an acellular degenerative valve nonviable at the time of implantation used in an earlier clinical series (December 1969 to May 1975, n = 124). In both series, recipient cell infiltration and repopulation of the allograft valve leaflets have not been demonstrated apart from a minimal basal sheath.Keywords
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