Abstract

Subcellular changes in 12 dura mater cardiac valves (in the mitral or aortic position) surgically removed after 23 to 108 months of implantation owing to calcification, rupture, or endocarditis show signs of a remodeling process. Significant morphologic changes in the connective tissue fiber matrices and cell populations were noted in the recovered valvular leaflets. Macrophages were found within electronlucent (cleared-out) areas, and they seemed to play an essential role in the remodeling process by ingesting and digesting selected connective tissue components. Fibroblasts found within these "rebuilding" areas in the dura mater tissue possessed small cytoplasmic vesicles (65 nm in diameter) being extruded from the cell. Evidence of early collagen formation was also found in association with both peripheral filaments and peripheral condensations, as well as within the connective tissue matrices surrounding the cellular elements, where electron dense amorphous material was observed. In conclusion, the long-term durability of dura mater bioprosthetic cardiac valves may be directly related to (1) glycerin stabilization and preservation of the collagen fibers, (2) the viability of the fibroblasts and macrophages within the implanted valves, and (3) the unique morphology and fine structure of the double-layered dura mater encephali. We hypothesize that the fibroblasts or myofibroblast-like cells found within the implanted leaflets, no matter what their origin, are capable of giving form and organization to the early developing connective tissue.

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