Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2985314 The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2006 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Objective(s)Even though the mechanism is not clearly understood, direct intramyocardial cell transplantation has demonstrated potential to treat patients with severe heart failure. We previously reported on the bioengineering of myoblast-based constructs. We investigate here the functional outcome of infarcted hearts treated by implantation of myoblast-seeded scaffolds.MethodsAdult Lewis rats with echocardiography-confirmed postinfarction reduced ejection fraction (48.3% ± 1.1%) were randomized to (1) implantation of myoblast-seeded polyurethane patches at the site of infarction (PU-MyoB, n = 11), (2) implantation of nonseeded polyurethane patches (PU, n = 11), (3) sham operation (Sham, n = 12), and (4) direct intramyocardial myoblast injection (MyoB, n = 11). Four weeks later, the functional assessment by echocardiography was repeated, and we additionally performed left ventricular catheterization plus histologic studies.ResultsThe ejection fraction significantly decreased in the PU (39.1% ± 2.3%; P = .02) and Sham (39.9% ± 3.5%; P = .04) groups, whereas it remained stable in the PU-MyoB (48.4% ± 3.1%) and MyoB (47.9% ± 3.0%) groups during the observation time. Similarly, left ventricular contractility was significantly higher in groups PU-MyoB (4960 ± 266 mm Hg/s) and MyoB (4748 ± 304 mm Hg/s) than in groups PU (3909 ± 248 mm Hg/s, P = .01) and Sham (4028 ± 199 mm Hg/s, P = .01). Immunohistology identified a high density of myoblasts within the seeded scaffolds without any migration toward the host cardiac tissue and no evidence of cardiac cell differentiation.ConclusionsMyoblast-seeded polyurethane scaffolds prevent post–myocardial infarction progression toward heart failure as efficiently as direct intramyocardial injection. The immunohistologic analysis suggests that an indirect mechanism, potentially a paracrine effect, may be assumed.

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