pubmed-article:9000655 | pubmed:abstractText | A total of 847 inbred Lewis rats of mixed sex were used in this pancreaticoduodenal (Pd) donor aging study. Pd grafts were taken from 9- to 12-month-old donors and transplanted into 3-month-old recipients (thus, the first generation Pd graft, or 1 Pd). After 9 to 12 months, the same Pd grafts were again harvested and transplanted into 3-month-old rats (thus the 2 Pd generation). This cycle was repeated to obtain the 3, 4, and 5 Pd series. Sequential transplantation was able to extend the Pd grafts' mean survival time to 32 months for fourteen 4 Pd grafts, and to 39.2 months for four 5 Pd grafts (the longest lived graft survived for 42 months). The pancreas and duodenal sections of the grafts remained normal throughout the entire study. However, the aortic sections of the grafts (which were harvested to include the superior mesenteric and celiac arteries) all exhibited moderate to massive atherosclerotic changes by the 5 Pd mean survival age of 39.2 months. Such histological changes commenced even before 21 months of Pd graft age in some animals, gradually progressing to dilation of the aorta (and subsequent narrowing of aortic tributaries), as well as formation of an eggshell-like inner membrane shielding the aortic intima, by 42 months. Such atherosclerotic changes precluded transplantations beyond the 5 Pd series. | lld:pubmed |