New tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study: twelve month follow-up in a rabbit model

Background Canine tracheal collapse is a complex airway pathology without promising treatment results. Currently nitinol stents are the best surgical option; however, some professionals are doubting if stent placement is the best option due to the associated complications. Objective Determine the te...

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Main Authors: Sandra Lopez-Minguez, Carolina Serrano-Casorran, Jose A. Guirola, Sergio Rodriguez-Zapater, Cristina Bonastre, Miguel Angel De Gregorio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-10-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/7797.pdf
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author Sandra Lopez-Minguez
Carolina Serrano-Casorran
Jose A. Guirola
Sergio Rodriguez-Zapater
Cristina Bonastre
Miguel Angel De Gregorio
author_facet Sandra Lopez-Minguez
Carolina Serrano-Casorran
Jose A. Guirola
Sergio Rodriguez-Zapater
Cristina Bonastre
Miguel Angel De Gregorio
author_sort Sandra Lopez-Minguez
collection DOAJ
description Background Canine tracheal collapse is a complex airway pathology without promising treatment results. Currently nitinol stents are the best surgical option; however, some professionals are doubting if stent placement is the best option due to the associated complications. Objective Determine the technical feasibility, safety, and long-term follow-up after the implantation of a new tracheal stent designed for canine tracheal collapse. Methods Thirteen healthy, adult female New Zealander rabbits were involved in this pilot study.A new intra-tracheal device (Reference number 902711 patent registered as CasMin-Twine) was implanted in ten animals. Deployment was performed under general anesthesia, making a puncture incision via a 21 Gauge needle in the intra-tracheal space where the stent was introduced with a screwing process. The device was fixed to the tracheal wall with a non-absorbable suture. Computerized Tomography (CT) and an endoscopy to study structural abnormalities were performed after 30, 90 and 365 days after stent placement. Results Technical and clinical success was 100%. There was no significant change in behavior or respiratory disorders. CT studies showed no significant alterations. After the 30 days, 60% of the animals showed partial endothelization in the endoscopy study, and only one animal still presented partial endothelization after 12 months. Mucus accumulation was only present in 40% of cases and classified as low, without respiratory consequences. Only one animal presented a single granuloma at caudal stent tip. Conclusions This new tracheal stent (CasMin-Twine) is an effective and safe procedure with promising results, and also shows the possibility of removing the device after endothelization has been produced. New studies should be carried out to evaluate the effectiveness in patients with tracheomalacia. Clinical Significance/Impact This new product can give veterinarians a new option of treatment for this complicated pathology. Minimizing specific equipment for its deployment, CasMin-Twine will be more accessible for all professionals.
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spelling doaj.art-347c397552d447f996b1bf5861e965722023-12-03T07:14:44ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-10-017e779710.7717/peerj.7797New tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study: twelve month follow-up in a rabbit modelSandra Lopez-Minguez0Carolina Serrano-Casorran1Jose A. Guirola2Sergio Rodriguez-Zapater3Cristina Bonastre4Miguel Angel De Gregorio5University of Zaragoza, GITMI Minimally Invasive Techniques Research Group, Zaragoza, SpainUniversity of Zaragoza, GITMI Minimally Invasive Techniques Research Group, Zaragoza, SpainUniversity of Zaragoza, GITMI Minimally Invasive Techniques Research Group, Zaragoza, SpainUniversity of Zaragoza, GITMI Minimally Invasive Techniques Research Group, Zaragoza, SpainUniversity of Zaragoza, GITMI Minimally Invasive Techniques Research Group, Zaragoza, SpainUniversity of Zaragoza, GITMI Minimally Invasive Techniques Research Group, Zaragoza, SpainBackground Canine tracheal collapse is a complex airway pathology without promising treatment results. Currently nitinol stents are the best surgical option; however, some professionals are doubting if stent placement is the best option due to the associated complications. Objective Determine the technical feasibility, safety, and long-term follow-up after the implantation of a new tracheal stent designed for canine tracheal collapse. Methods Thirteen healthy, adult female New Zealander rabbits were involved in this pilot study.A new intra-tracheal device (Reference number 902711 patent registered as CasMin-Twine) was implanted in ten animals. Deployment was performed under general anesthesia, making a puncture incision via a 21 Gauge needle in the intra-tracheal space where the stent was introduced with a screwing process. The device was fixed to the tracheal wall with a non-absorbable suture. Computerized Tomography (CT) and an endoscopy to study structural abnormalities were performed after 30, 90 and 365 days after stent placement. Results Technical and clinical success was 100%. There was no significant change in behavior or respiratory disorders. CT studies showed no significant alterations. After the 30 days, 60% of the animals showed partial endothelization in the endoscopy study, and only one animal still presented partial endothelization after 12 months. Mucus accumulation was only present in 40% of cases and classified as low, without respiratory consequences. Only one animal presented a single granuloma at caudal stent tip. Conclusions This new tracheal stent (CasMin-Twine) is an effective and safe procedure with promising results, and also shows the possibility of removing the device after endothelization has been produced. New studies should be carried out to evaluate the effectiveness in patients with tracheomalacia. Clinical Significance/Impact This new product can give veterinarians a new option of treatment for this complicated pathology. Minimizing specific equipment for its deployment, CasMin-Twine will be more accessible for all professionals.https://peerj.com/articles/7797.pdfTracheal collapseStentTracheomalaciaDogsPilot studyInterventional radiology
spellingShingle Sandra Lopez-Minguez
Carolina Serrano-Casorran
Jose A. Guirola
Sergio Rodriguez-Zapater
Cristina Bonastre
Miguel Angel De Gregorio
New tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study: twelve month follow-up in a rabbit model
PeerJ
Tracheal collapse
Stent
Tracheomalacia
Dogs
Pilot study
Interventional radiology
title New tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study: twelve month follow-up in a rabbit model
title_full New tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study: twelve month follow-up in a rabbit model
title_fullStr New tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study: twelve month follow-up in a rabbit model
title_full_unstemmed New tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study: twelve month follow-up in a rabbit model
title_short New tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study: twelve month follow-up in a rabbit model
title_sort new tracheal stainless steel stent pilot study twelve month follow up in a rabbit model
topic Tracheal collapse
Stent
Tracheomalacia
Dogs
Pilot study
Interventional radiology
url https://peerj.com/articles/7797.pdf
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