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Less scarring with new coronary artery graft technique

A new technique for coronary bypass surgery shows a reduction in problematic scar tissue growth, found a Norwegian study.

Surgeons often take a blood vessel from your leg to graft onto your heart during a coronary bypass surgery. The practice can lead to scarring in many patients, which in turn can cause another heart attack. A new technique under development may help prevent this problem.

In coronary bypass surgery, a vein from the leg is often grafted around problematic blocked vessels near the heart. However, this technique often leads to formation of scar tissue, which can cause further blockages and lead to another heart attack. A new technique for extracting the blood vessel from the leg, a promising new study from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), shows a reduction in problematic scar tissue growth.

Heart attacks and angina occur when the vessels that supply the heart with blood become clogged with plaque. In some cases, this blockage can't be removed, and coronary bypass surgery is the solution. Coronary bypass involves taking a healthy vein from elsewhere in the body, most commonly one of the large veins from the inside of the leg, and sewing it in around the blocked vessel. This is called a graft. However, there is a risk that the graft will become blocked as well, the main cause of this being scarring caused by damage to the innermost layer of the artery wall (which is called intimal hyperplasia).

Usually, surgeons take only the vein from the patient's leg. But now, NTNU researchers are studying the effect of a new method that involves harvesting some of the tissue around the vein as well. The idea is that this will prevent damage to the vein walls during the transplant.

"Six months after surgery, scar tissue formation around the graft was clearly lower in patients who had been treated using the new transplant technique," says Øystein Pettersen, a PhD candidate at NTNU's department of circulation and medical imaging. He is also a doctor in specialisation at the thoracic surgery clinic at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim.

Patients involved in the study were randomly assigned to one of the two treatment methods. The amount of scarring six months after surgery was measured using a highly-advanced imaging method called optical coherence tomography (OCT). OCT uses infrared light to create very high resolution images, which in this case allows researchers to precisely measure the thickness of the innermost layer of the artery wall, called the intima.

"The thickness of the intima was on average 0.36 millimeters in patients who had received conventional treatment. In the group where the new technique for vein harvesting was used, the graft was significantly less constricted, with an average thickness of 0.27 millimeters," explains Pettersen. "There was also less variation in the vein wall thickness in the group where the new method was used."

The researchers could not, however, show any significant difference in the number of vein grafts that were completely blocked in the two groups, respectively six by conventional treatment method and four by the new technique.

"We can't expect to see a difference with such a short follow-up period. But it will be very interesting to continue following these patients," Pettersen concludes.

Patients in the study underwent surgery at St Olavs Hospital between April 2013 and December 2014. A total of 100 patients participated, and the researchers plan to do further studies to see the effects of their technique for the next five years.

Abstract
No abstract available for this article

Authors
Øystein Pettersen, Rune Wiseth, Knut Hegbom, Dag Ole Nordhaug

[link url="https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/02/170216120155.htm"]Norwegian University of Science and Technology material[/link]
[link url="http://www.onlinejacc.org/content/68/4/427"]Journal of the American College of Cardiology article[/link]

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