The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 44, 618-624, Copyright © 1987 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
Left ventricular full-thickness cardiomyoplasty with pericardial neoendocardium: experimental development of a surgical procedure
M Dewar, G Walsh, R Abraham, J DeSimon, E Foot, J Stewart, R Fraser and RC Chiu
Division of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Montreal General Hospital, Que, Canada.
Cardiomyoplasty, a surgical procedure using stimulated skeletal muscle
graft to replace or repair damaged myocardium, has been successfully
performed in experimental animals and clinical patients. Whenever feasible,
endocardium of the damaged myocardial segment is retained and
partial-thickness cardiomyoplasty should be carried out. However, if this
procedure were to be applied to enlarge a hypoplastic ventricle or to
maintain normal dimensions of the ventricular cavity in some repairs in
adults, full-thickness replacement of the ventricular wall with contractile
skeletal muscle mass would be required. To develop such a technique,
several canine experiments were carried out. In 7 dogs, "simple
full-thickness cardiomyoplasty" was performed by using a latissimus dorsi
muscle graft to repair a full-thickness left ventricular wall defect. We
found it was difficult to obtain adequate hemostasis between the nonscarred
myocardial tissue and the skeletal muscle graft, and excessive suturing to
obtain hemostasis resulted in strangulation of the muscle grafts. The
skeletal muscle-blood interface in the left ventricle was found to be
highly thrombogenic. The perioperative hemorrhage and the risk of muscle
graft strangulation by excessive sutures were avoided by using a
pericardial patch as neoendocardium in 5 dogs that underwent similar
full-thickness cardiomyoplasty procedures. Although the pericardial
neoendocardium was not fully antithrombogenic in this canine model,
endothelialization of the endocardium occurred within several weeks after
operation. Thus, when combined with an implantable synchronized burst
stimulator, this technique may in the future provide an effective
"full-thickness dynamic cardiomyoplasty" to enlarge the ventricles and
augment myocardial function in select patients.