Tracheal replacement by autogenous aorta

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Abstract

Background: Tracheal defects may occur after trauma or prolonged intubation. Resection of tracheal tumors also poses a major challenge for substitution. In an effort to solve this problem, different techniques have been tried with little success. We report on a new animal model which showed acceptable results with fewer complications. Methods: We replaced 5 cm of cervical trachea in 10 dogs with harvested infra-renal aorta and repaired the aortic defect with Dacron graft. Results: Necropsy of the grafted aorta and anastomotic site revealed well healed anastomosis in all animals together with ciliated columnar epithelium coverage of grafted aorta and neovascularization of aortic wall. Conclusion: Aortic graft is preferable to other substitutes because of less antigenicity, less vascularity, and no mucous secretions or peristalsis. © 2009 Anoosh et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Anoosh, F., Hodjati, H., Dehghani, S., Tanideh, N., & Kumar, P. V. (2009). Tracheal replacement by autogenous aorta. Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery, 4. https://doi.org/10.1186/1749-8090-4-23

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