Feedback

Material-Induced Platelet Adhesion/Activation and Hemolysis of Membrane Lung Components from Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation

Affiliation
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, University Hospital Regensburg, 93053 Regensburg, Germany;
Thaus, Christopher;
ORCID
0000-0002-4402-1810
Affiliation
Department of Internal Medicine II, University Hospital Regensburg, 93053 Regensburg, Germany;
Lubnow, Matthias;
ORCID
0000-0002-6275-3505
Affiliation
Regensburg Center of Biomedical Engineering, Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule, 93053 Regensburg, Germany;
Krenkel, Lars;
Affiliation
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, University Hospital Regensburg, 93053 Regensburg, Germany;
Lehle, Karla

Background: Contact between blood and the large artificial surfaces within membrane lungs (MLs) is one reason for device-induced thrombus formation during extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Methods: Hemocompatibility testing of gas-exchange fibers (GFs) and heat-exchange fibers (HEs) from commercially available/non-used MLs (ML-type, coating: PLS, Bioline ® ; Hilite7000LT, X.ELLENCE ® ; Nautilus, Balance ® ; EOS, PH.I.S.I.O ® ) included static hemolysis and platelet adhesion/activation assays. Platelet activation of non-adherent platelets was identified after antibody (CD62P, PAC-1, CD61) and fibrinogen staining (flow cytometry). The surface coverage (%) of adherent platelets was quantified after F-actin filament-staining. Results: All materials were non-hemolytic and did not induce platelet activation. However, platelet adhesion (median (IQR)) depended on the type of surface coating of GFs made entirely of polymethylpentene. Both uncoated GFs (12 (7–19)%) and X.ELLENCE-coated GFs (Hilite-ML, 13 (8–19)%) showed a significantly higher surface coverage compared to Balance-coated GFs (Nautilus-ML, 3 (1–6)%), PH.I.S.I.O-coated GFs (EOS-ML, 2 (2–5)%) and Bioline-coated GFs (PLS-ML, 4 (1–8)%) ( p < 0.001). HEs made of polyethyleneterephthalate (Hilite-ML, Nautilus-ML) that were coated with X.ELLENCE were covered with more platelets (5 (3–7)%) compared to Balance-coated HEs (3 (1–6)%), respectively ( p = 0.029). Conclusions: In vitro testing disclosed fourfold higher platelet adhesion on X.ELLENCE-coated GFs (and HEs) from the Hilite-ML compared to other ECMO-materials. Additional hemocompatibility tests are necessary to assess the increased platelet adhesion on the materials from the Hilite-ML.

Cite

Citation style:
Could not load citation form.

Access Statistic

Total:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:
Last 12 Month:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:

Rights

License Holder: © 2025 by the authors.

Use and reproduction: