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Interact CardioVasc Thorac Surg 2007;6:331-334. doi:10.1510/icvts.2006.145367
© 2007 European Association of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery

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Masaru Yoshikai
Tsuyoshi Itoh
Hideyuki Fumoto
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Institutional report - Coronary

Intimal injury of ultrasonically skeletonized internal thoracic artery by a vessel clamp: morphological analysis

Masaru Yoshikaia,*, Tsuyoshi Itohb, Keiji Kamoharaa, Junji Yunokia and Hideyuki Fumotoa

a Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Shin-Koga Hospital, 120 Tenjin-cho, Kurume, Fukuoka 830-8577, Japan
b General Thoracic Surgery, Saga University, Saga, Japan

*Corresponding author. Tel.: +81-942-38-2222; fax: +81-942-38-2248.

E-mail address: myoshi{at}toq.ne.jp (M. Yoshikai).

The skeletonized internal thoracic artery (ITA) has several advantages over a pedicled one in coronary artery bypass grafting. A skeletonized ITA, which lacks surrounding tissue, thus seems more susceptible to the mechanical force exerted by a vessel clamp than the pedicled ITA. The purpose of this study was to assess the detrimental effect of vessel clamps on the intimal integrity of the ultrasonically skeletonized ITA. We skeletonized twelve ITAs with an ultrasonic scalpel in patients who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting, and thereafter two types of clamp, namely a metal clamp and a fibrous jaw clamp, were applied to the terminal portion of the ITA for 30 min. The intimal integrity of the ITAs was morphologically assessed using scanning electron microscopy. A metal clamp can cause serious intimal injury which disrupts the internal elastic lamina, and thus should be avoided for the temporary clamping of the skeletonized ITA. A fibrous jay clamp, however, hardly ever causes intimal injury, and its clinical use for the temporary clamping of the ultrasonically skeletonized ITA is therefore recommended. Vessel clamps can cause intimal injury of the ultrasonically skeletonized ITA, and the degree of the injury depends on the type of the clamp used.

Key Words: Intima; Internal thoracic artery; Skeletonization; Ultrasonic scalpel; Scanning electron microscopy







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