Abstract

Fibrous polyurethane prostheses were implanted in the carotid arteries and aortae of New Zealand white (NZW) and Chinchilla (CHIN) rabbits. No immediate post-implantation patency was obtained after implantation in the carotid arteries in NZW rabbits. In CHIN rabbits patency up to 1 week was obtained after carotid implantation. Attempts to increase patency rates by administration of 20 mg/kg body weight/day of both dipyridamol (DIP) and acetyl-salicylic acid (ASA) p.o., starting the week before implantation, had an adverse effect; prostheses became occluded within a few hours after implantation. Coagulation tests (Lee and White, Am J Med Sci 145:495-503, 1913) carried out with blood drawn from CHIN rabbits revealed hypercoaguability after administration of either 10 or 20 mg/kg body weight/day of both DIP and ASA compared to pre-medication values. Prostheses implanted in the aortae of both strains remained patent without anti-platelet-aggregation therapy for a 3-month observation period. It is concluded that in the NZW rabbit carotid implantation was not successful due to severe spasmic reactions and that in CHIN rabbits only very short-term patency could be obtained both with and without administration of 10 or 20 mg/kg body weight/day medication DIP and ASA.

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