5 research outputs found
Successful Long-term Extracorporeal Perfusion of Free Musculocutaneous Flaps in a Porcine Model
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Extracorporeal perfusion is a technique that aims to safely prolong tissue preservation by reducing ischemia-reperfusion injury. Free muscle flaps provide a sensitive research model due to their low ischemic tolerance. However, long-term perfusion of free muscle flaps is scarcely researched. The aim of this study was to compare tissue damage in musculocutaneous flaps during 36 h of extracorporeal perfusion versus static cold storage. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Bilateral free rectus abdominis flaps were harvested from five Dutch Landrace pigs (weight: 53-59 kg). Flaps were treated for 36 h according to the following study groups: (1) cold storage at 4 degrees C-6 degrees C (n = 4), (2) perfusion with histidine-tryptophan-ketoglutarate (HTK) at 8 degrees C-10 degrees C (n = 3), (3) perfusion with University of Wisconsin solution (UW) at 8 degrees C-10 degrees C (n = 3). Perfusion fluid samples (creatinine kinase, blood gas) and biopsies for quantitative polymerase chain reaction were collected at multiple time points. Microcirculation was assessed at 24 h of preservation using indocyanine-green fluorescence angiography. Flap weight was measured at the start and end of the preservation period. RESULTS: Successful and stable perfusion for 36 h was achieved in all perfused flaps. The mean creatinine kinase increase in the perfusion fluid was comparable in both the groups (UW: +43,144 U/L, HTK: +44,404 U/L). Mean lactate was higher in the UW group than in the HTK group (6.57 versus 1.07 mmol/L). There were homogenous and complete perfusion patterns on indocyanine-green angiography in both the perfusion groups, in contrast to incomplete and inhomogeneous patterns during cold storage. Expression of genes related to apoptosis and inflammation was lower in perfused flaps than in the cold storage group. Weight increase was highest in the HTK group (78%; standard deviation [SD], 29%) compared with UW (22%; SD, 22%) and cold storage (0.7%; SD, 4%). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term extracorporeal perfusion of free rectus abdominis flaps is feasible. Outcomes in the perfusion groups seemed superior compared to cold storage. Hypotheses gained from this research need to be further explored in a replantation setting
A genome scan reveals QTL for growth, fatness, leanness and meat quality in a Duroc-Pietrain resource population
We performed a genome-wide QTL scan for production traits in a line cross between Duroc and Pietrain breeds of pigs, which included 585 F(2) progeny produced from 31 full-sib families genotyped with 106 informative microsatellites. A linkage map covering all 18 autosomes and spanning 1987 Kosambi cM was constructed. Thirty-five phenotypic traits including body weight, growth, carcass composition and meat quality traits were analysed using least square regression interval mapping. Twenty-four QTL exceeded the genome-wide significance threshold, while 47 QTL reached the suggestive threshold. These QTL were located at 28 genomic regions on 16 autosomal chromosomes and QTL in 11 regions were significant at the genome-wide level. A QTL affecting pH value in loin was detected on SSC1 between marker-interval S0312-S0113 with strong statistical support (P < 3.0 x 10(-14)); this QTL was also associated with meat colour and conductivity. QTL for carcass composition and average daily gain was also found on SSC1, suggesting multiple QTL. Seventeen genomic segments had only a single QTL that reached at least suggestive significance. Forty QTL exhibited additive inheritance whereas 31 QTL showed (over-) dominance effects. Two QTL for trait backfat thickness were detected on SSC2; a significant paternal effect was found for a QTL in the IGF2 region while another QTL in the middle of SSC2 showed Mendelian expression