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A Mobile Extracorporeal Extremity Salvage System for Replantation and Transplantation

Authors :
Sebastian Fischer
Harriet Kiwanuka
Geoffroy C. Sisk
Maximilian Kueckelhaus
Yannick Diehm
Ericka M. Bueno
Muayyad Alhefzi
Alexander Dermietzel
Bohdan Pomahac
Mario A. Aycart
Source :
Annals of Plastic Surgery. 76:355-360
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2016.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Traumatic amputation is the second leading cause of limb loss in the United States. The preferred treatment is salvage and replantation of the amputated limb, whenever possible, and allotransplantation is a novel procedure whereby healthy limbs are procured from deceased organ donors and transplanted into the amputee recipient. A major restriction for both procedures is the irrecoverable muscle damage occurring due to ischemia. We investigated the feasibility of using a novel lightweight, mobile perfusion device specifically designed to perfuse amputated porcine limbs with an acellular perfusion solution to delay ischemic muscle damage prior to transplantation or replantation. METHODS Bilateral hind limbs of Yorkshire pigs were amputated; one of the limbs was preserved by perfusion in the mobile perfusion device, and the other by storage in ice slurry for 12 hours. RESULTS Five sets of bilateral limbs were preserved as described previously. A defined pressure of 30 mm Hg was reliably maintained in the arterial system without loss of flow. Comparison of the perfusate composition before and after limb passage revealed significant differences. Muscle biopsies showed a consistent progression of clusters of hypoxic cells in the control limbs with time. Similar changes could not be observed in the perfused tissue. CONCLUSIONS We have designed and built a small, mobile perfusion device that is operational and that more closely mimics the normal physiological environment when compared with the current standard of preservation in ice slurry. This project may have far-reaching implications for the treatment of limb loss through replantation and transplantation.

Details

ISSN :
01487043
Volume :
76
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Plastic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f02c771c6385734ed3660488625dff2c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/sap.0000000000000681