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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Full thickness abdominal wall defect in growing rats as a model for congenital diaphragmatic hernia prosthetic repair.

Journal:
Journal of pediatric surgery
Year:
2014
Authors:
Gucciardo, Léonardo et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Development and Regeneration
Species:
rodent

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Large congenital diaphragmatic hernia may require prosthetic correction. Acellular collagen matrices were introduced to avoid complications owing to the use of synthetic patches. We tested 3 different ACM for reconstruction of an abdominal wall defect in an animal model that mimics the fast growth during infancy. METHODS: Pelvisoft&#xae; (CR Bard, Covington, GA) and 2 investigational ACM were used for primary reconstruction of a full thickness abdominal wall defect. 3months-old rats (n=26) were allowed to survive for 90days after implantation. Anatomical, tensiometric and histological analyses were performed. Based on good outcomes, we did the same with 1month-old rats (n=54). Unoperated rats were used for obtaining reference tensiometric values of selected native tissues. RESULTS: Major wound complications were exclusively observed in 1month-old rats. All explants in both groups thinned significantly (p<0.03) and had an elastic modulus increasing over time, far above that from native tissues at 90days of life. Both investigational ACM induced a more vigorous foreign body reaction than Pelvisoft(&#xae;). CONCLUSIONS: The shift from 3 to 1month-old rats was associated with wound complications. Pelvisoft&#xae; showed a better biocompatibility than the 2 investigational ACM. Passive biomechanical properties of all explants were still not comparable to that of native tissues.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25280646/