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Zwitterionic poly-carboxybetaine coating reduces artificial lung thrombosis in sheep and rabbits.


ABSTRACT: Current artificial lungs fail in 1-4?weeks due to surface-induced thrombosis. Biomaterial coatings may be applied to anticoagulate artificial surfaces, but none have shown marked long-term effectiveness. Poly-carboxybetaine (pCB) coatings have shown promising results in reducing protein and platelet-fouling in vitro. However, in vivo hemocompatibility remains to be investigated. Thus, three different pCB-grafting approaches to artificial lung surfaces were first investigated: 1) graft-to approach using 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) conjugated with pCB (DOPA-pCB); 2) graft-from approach using the Activators ReGenerated by Electron Transfer method of atom transfer radical polymerization (ARGET-ATRP); and 3) graft-to approach using pCB randomly copolymerized with hydrophobic moieties. One device coated with each of these methods and one uncoated device were attached in parallel within a veno-venous sheep extracorporeal circuit with no continuous anticoagulation (N?=?5 circuits). The DOPA-pCB approach showed the least increase in blood flow resistance and the lowest incidence of device failure over 36-hours. Next, we further investigated the impact of tip-to-tip DOPA-pCB coating in a 4-hour rabbit study with veno-venous micro-artificial lung circuit at a higher activated clotting time of 220-300?s (N???5). Here, DOPA-pCB reduced fibrin formation (p?=?0.06) and gross thrombus formation by 59% (p?

SUBMITTER: Ukita R 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6633914 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Zwitterionic poly-carboxybetaine coating reduces artificial lung thrombosis in sheep and rabbits.

Ukita Rei R   Wu Kan K   Lin Xiaojie X   Carleton Neil M NM   Naito Noritsugu N   Lai Angela A   Do-Nguyen Chi Chi CC   Demarest Caitlin T CT   Jiang Shaoyi S   Cook Keith E KE  

Acta biomaterialia 20190510


Current artificial lungs fail in 1-4 weeks due to surface-induced thrombosis. Biomaterial coatings may be applied to anticoagulate artificial surfaces, but none have shown marked long-term effectiveness. Poly-carboxybetaine (pCB) coatings have shown promising results in reducing protein and platelet-fouling in vitro. However, in vivo hemocompatibility remains to be investigated. Thus, three different pCB-grafting approaches to artificial lung surfaces were first investigated: 1) graft-to approac  ...[more]

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