Sutureless coronary anastomosis with an anastomotic device and tissue adhesive in off-pump porcine coronary bypass grafting.
Objective: In the search for a facilitated coronary artery anastomosis, we assessed the feasibility of a hybrid anastomosis technique that used a prototype anastomotic device with an extraluminal frame (crinoline-like) and octyl-cyanoacrylate adhesive.
Methods: During off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting in pigs (n = 8), a left internal thoracic artery-right coronary artery anastomosis was constructed and evaluated during the operation and at 5 postoperative weeks. The anastomosis was examined by flow measurement, angiography, intraluminal cast geometric analysis, and histologic analysis.
Results: Anastomosis construction required 6.2 +/- 1.3 minutes (mean +/- SD). At 5 weeks all anastomoses were fully patent, with minor anastomotic diameter narrowing (median 16%, 15th-85th percentile 16%-26%). After 30-second graft occlusion, median peak hyperemic flow response was 5.0 (15th-85th percentile 4.4-6.5). As a result of complete, streamlining filling of anastomotic wall recesses by neointima formation, more intimal hyperplasia was found in the crinoline-adhesive anastomoses than in sutured control anastomoses. No excessive, lumen-narrowing neointima formation was observed, however.
Conclusions: The hybrid coronary anastomosis technique was feasible without any need for dedicated application tools. If technical improvements can be realized, the hybrid technique may provide an alternative to manual suturing.