Rupp Christopher C, Hoffmann Nathan E, Schmidlin Franz R, Swanlund David J, Bischof John C, Coad James E
Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
Cryobiology. 2002 Oct;45(2):167-82. doi: 10.1016/s0011-2240(02)00125-6.
Advances in minimally invasive renal cryosurgery have renewed interest in the relative contributions of direct cryothermic and secondary vascular injury-associated ischemic cell injury. Prior studies have evaluated renal cryolesions seven or more days post-ablation and postulated that vascular injury is the primary cell injury mechanism; however, the contributions of direct versus secondary cell injury are not morphologically distinguishable during the healing/repair stage of a cryolesion. While more optimal to evaluate this issue, minimal acute (< or = 3 days) post-ablation histologic data with thermal history correlation exists. This study evaluates three groups of porcine renal cryolesions: Group (1) in vitro non-perfused (n = 5); Group (2) in vivo 2-h post-ablation perfused (n = 5); and Group (3) in vivo 3-day post-ablation perfused (n = 6). The 3.4 mm argon-cooled cryoprobe's thermal history included a 75 degrees C/min cooling rate, -130 degrees C end temperature, 60 degrees C/min thawing rate, and 15-min freeze time. An enthalpy-based mathematical model with a 2-D transient axisymmetric numerical solution with blood flow consideration was used to determine the thermal history within the ice ball. All three groups of cryolesions showed histologically similar central regions of complete cell death (CD) and transition zones of incomplete cell death (TZ). The CD had radii of 1.4, 1.1, and 1.0 cm in the non-perfused, 2-h and 3-day lesions, respectively. Capillary thrombosis was present in the 2-h perfused cryolesions with the addition of TZ arteriolar/venous thrombosis in the 3-day perfused lesions. Thermal modeling revealed the outer CD boundary in all three groups experienced similar thermal histories with an approximately -20 degrees C end temperature and 2 degrees C/min cooling and thawing rates. The presence of similar CD histology and in vitro/in vivo thermal histories in each group suggests that direct cryothermic cell injury, prior to or synchronous with vascular thrombosis, is a primary mediator of cell death in renal cryolesions.
微创肾冷冻手术的进展重新引发了人们对直接低温损伤和继发性血管损伤相关缺血性细胞损伤相对作用的关注。先前的研究在消融后7天或更长时间评估肾冷冻损伤,并推测血管损伤是主要的细胞损伤机制;然而,在冷冻损伤的愈合/修复阶段,直接与继发性细胞损伤的作用在形态学上无法区分。虽然评估这个问题更理想,但关于消融后急性(≤3天)且有热历史相关性的组织学数据很少。本研究评估了三组猪肾冷冻损伤:第1组为体外非灌注组(n = 5);第2组为消融后2小时体内灌注组(n = 5);第3组为消融后3天体内灌注组(n = 6)。3.4毫米氩气冷却冷冻探头的热历史包括75℃/分钟的冷却速率、-130℃的终末温度、60℃/分钟的解冻速率和15分钟的冷冻时间。使用基于焓的数学模型,采用考虑血流的二维瞬态轴对称数值解来确定冰球内的热历史。所有三组冷冻损伤在组织学上均显示出相似的完全细胞死亡(CD)中心区域和不完全细胞死亡过渡区(TZ)。非灌注、2小时和3天损伤的CD半径分别为1.4厘米、1.1厘米和1.0厘米。2小时灌注的冷冻损伤中存在毛细血管血栓形成,3天灌注的损伤中还伴有TZ小动脉/静脉血栓形成。热模型显示,所有三组的外CD边界经历了相似的热历史,终末温度约为-20℃,冷却和解冻速率为2℃/分钟。每组中相似的CD组织学以及体外/体内热历史表明,在血管血栓形成之前或与之同步的直接低温细胞损伤是肾冷冻损伤中细胞死亡的主要介质。