Brilliant blue FCF as an alternative dye for saphenous vein graft marking: Effect on conduit function

Igor V. Voskresensky, Eric S. Wise, Kyle M. Hocking, Fan Dong Li, Michael J. Osgood, Padmini Komalavilas, Colleen Brophy, Joyce Cheung-Flynn

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Surgical skin markers are used off-label to mark human saphenous veins (HSVs) to maintain orientation before implantation as aortocoronary or peripheral arterial bypass grafts. These surgical skin markers impair functional responses of the HSV tissue. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effect of brilliant blue dye 1 (brilliant blue FCF [for food coloring]; hereinafter, FCF) as a nontoxic alternative marking dye and to determine whether FCF has pharmacological properties. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Segments of HSVswere collected in university hospitals from patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting procedures immediately after harvest (unmanipulated) or after typical intraoperative surgical graft preparation (after manipulation). Rat inferior venae cavae were used to determine the pharmacological properties and cellular targets of FCF. Endothelial and smooth muscle functional responses were determined in a muscle bath, and intimal thickening in HSVs was determined after 14 days in organ culture. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Contractile responseswere measured in force and converted to stress. Smooth muscle function was expressed as maximal responses to potassium chloride depolarization contractions. Endothelial function was defined as the percentage of relaxation of maximal agonist-induced contraction. Neointimal thickness was measured by histomorphometric analysis. RESULTS: Human saphenous veins stored in the presence of FCF had no loss of endothelial or smooth muscle function. Unmanipulated HSVs preserved in the presence of FCF demonstrated a significant increase in endothelial-dependent relaxation (mean [SEM], 25.2% [6.4%] vs 30.2%[6.7%]; P = .02). Application of FCF to functionally nonviable tissue significantly enhanced the smooth muscle responses (mean [SEM], 0.018 [0.004] × 105 N/m2 vs 0.057 [0.016] × 105 N/m2; P = .05). Treatment with FCF reduced intimal thickness in organ culture (mean [SEM], -17.5%[2.1%] for unmanipulated HSVs vs -27.9%[3.7%] for HSVs after manipulation; P < .001). In rat inferior venae cavae, FCF inhibited the contraction induced by the P2X7 receptor agonist 2?(3?)-O-(4-benzoyl)benzoyl-adenosine-5?-triphosphate (mean [SEM], 14.8%[2.2%] vs 6.5%[1.8%]; P = .02) to an extent similar to the P2X7 receptor antagonist oxidized adenosine triphosphate (mean [SEM], 5.0% [0.9%]; P < .02 vs control) or the pannexin hemichannel inhibitor probenecid (mean [SEM], 7.3%[1.6%] and 4.7% [0.9%] for 0.5mM and 2mM, respectively; P < .05). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Treatment with FCF did not impair endothelial or smooth muscle function in HSVs. Brilliant blue FCF enhanced endothelial-dependent relaxation, restored smooth muscle function, and prevented intimal hyperplasia in HSVs in organ culture. These pharmacological properties of FCF may be due to P2X7 receptor or pannexin channel inhibition. Brilliant blue FCF is an alternative, nontoxic marking dye that may improve HSV conduit function and decrease intimal hyperplasia.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1176-1181
Number of pages6
JournalJAMA Surgery
Volume149
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2014
Externally publishedYes

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Publisher Copyright:
Copyright 2014 American Medical Association. All rights reserved

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