Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 ANALYSIS OF SILICONE LEVELS IN CAPSULES OF GEL AND SALINE BREAST IMPLANTS AND PENILE PROSTHESES Authors: s W.; D.; Lugowski S.; McHugh A.; Keresteci A.; Baines C. Address: Division of Plastic Surgery, Wellesley Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Source: ls Plastic Surgery, June, 1995, 34:6, 578- 84 Abstract: Although a potential link between silicone-gel breast implants and autoimmune connective tissue disease has been suggested, none has been proven. The potential role of silicone as an immune adjuvant remains very controversial. Currently available techniques do not allow precise measurements of silicone in tissues. However, all compounds containing silicon (including silicone) can be measured accurately. The present study was designed to measure silicon levels in the fibrous capsules of patients with silicone-gel breast implants, saline breast implants, and silicone inflatable penile prostheses. Baseline control silicon levels were obtained from the breast tissue of patients undergoing breast reduction, who had no exposure to breast implants. All silicon measurements were carried out using atomic absorption spectrometry with a graphite furnace. Silicon was measured in a normal heptane extract of silicone from dried tissue. The mean silicon levels in 16 breast tissue control samples from 8 patients undergoing breast reduction varied from 0.025 to 0.742 micrograms/gm with the median mean being 0.0927. The median silicon level in capsules from six patients with saline implants was 7.7 micrograms/gm (range; 1.9- 36.6 micrograms/gm; averages 8,300% or 83 times more than those without a silicone implant). The median silicon level in capsules from five patients with silicone inflatable penile prostheses was 19.5 micrograms/gm (range; 1.9-34.8 micrograms/gm; .0927 divided by 19.5 = 21,000% more than those without any type silicone implant). Although the levels of silicon in capsules of patients with saline breast prostheses and penile implants were higher than in control samples, they were much lower than those from the capsules of the 58 gel implants (median; 9,979 micrograms/gm; range, 371-152,000 micrograms/gm; almost 108,000 times as much silicone in capsules Vs those without any type silicone implant). BREAST CAPSULE PERSISTENCE AFTER BREAST IMPLANT REMOVAL Authors: W. Bradford Rockwell, M.D., Holly D. Casey, M.D., and A. Cheng, M.D., Salt Lake City, Utah Source: Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Journal, 101: 1085, 1998 Breast implant capsules are a foreign body immune response to breast implants. It has been proposed that capsulectomy after breast implant removal was unnecessary, as the body resorbs the capsule when the implant, the impetus for the foreign body response, is removed. We report eight women with persistent capsules 10 months to 17 years after silicone breast implant removal. COMPLICATIONS RELATED TO RETAINED BREAST IMPLANT CAPSULES Author: Hardt, N. S.; Yu, L.; LaTorre, G.; Steinbach, B. Address: Dept. Pathology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL. Source: Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Journal, Feb., 1995, 95:2, 364-71 Abstract: Citing evidence that breast implant-related capsules resolve uneventfully, surgeons have elected to leave the capsules in place when implants are removed because capsulectomy adds both morbidity and expense to the procedure. However, recent clinical and histopathologic evidence suggests that uneventful resolution is not always the case, and several potential problems may arise from retained capsules after removal of the implant. Retained implant capsules may result in a spiculated mass suspicious for carcinoma, dense calcifications that obscure neighboring breast tissue on subsequent imaging studies, and cystic masses due to persistent serous effusion, expansile hematoma, or encapsulated silicone filled cysts. Furthermore, retained capsules are a reservoir of implant-related foreign material in the case of silicone gel-filled implants and textured implants promoting tissue ingrowth. To avoid complications from retained capsules, total capsulectomy or postoperative surveillance should be offered to patients. LETTER BY DR. SHANKLIN TO AN INSURANCE COMPANY REGARDING NECESSITY OF A TOTAL CAPSULECTOMY September 16, 1996 To Whom It May Concern: This communication is prompted by a form letter received by one of my patients from Florida which advised her that silicone implant removal would be covered as medically necessary but not device capsulectomy. It has been said, if you stay in medical practice long enough, just about everything will occur: in this case, a health insurer unbundling their own coverage! (Letter Dated August ,1995 from Aetna says, " Based on a review of the submitted data, we are unable to allow benefits for bilateral capsulectomies. Charges for removal of silicone gel-filled implants are covered when medically necessary. " Hopefully, my suit has cured them of this! The interesting part starts; read on!): Let me start with the last sentence of the letter, an attribution of the American College of Rheumatology (from Aetna's letter; " The American College of Rheumatology advises there is no evidence to support an association between systemic disease and the implants. " ) A statement was made to that effect at their annual meeting in San Francisco last October but it was not a policy statement. It was an unauthorized press release by the outgoing president which has since been retracted. In addition, the special study group of the ACR for silicone diseases is now ready to report. We are told criteria have been developed which permit a differential diagnosis of silicone disease (Siliconosis) from other connective tissue diseases. There is a remarkably large body of medical and scientific literature on these matters which emphatically shows the capsule is the site of the illness. It is one thing to debunk the patient of silicone load by explantation but unless the capsules come out at the same time the immunopathic process will continue unabated. The standard is not whether something is usual our customary, but whether it is the correct and logical thing to do. Please reexamine your policy on this matter. In the long run, the better health of these patients will be well served by doing the right thing: explantation with capsulectomy, a continuous and coherent procedure appropriate to the underlying pathology. A rational policy of this sort will also serve the financial fiduciary requirements of your firm over time. Such has been the experience of this clinic. Sincerely Yours, DOUGLAS R. SHANKLIN, M. D., F.R.S.M. Professor of Pathology and of Obstetrics and Gynecology Dr. Shanklin: 1-901-227- 7695 YEAH FOR DR. SHANKLIN! RESIDUAL CAPSULE AND INTERCAPSULAR DEBRIS AS LONG-TERM RISK FACTORS By: Dr. Pierre Blais, PhD Contamination of the space between the capsule and the implants by micro- organisms, silicone oils, degradation products and gel impurities constitutes a major problem which potentates the risk of implants. Such problems include inflammation, infection, deposition of mineral debris, as well as certain autoimmune phenomena. These problems can be present when implants are in situ (in the body) and are often attributable to the implant. The logical expectation is that, upon removal of the implants, adverse effects will cease. This is an unjustifiably optimistic view. It is well documented from case histories that removal and or replacement of implants without exhaustive debridement of the prosthetic site leads to failure and post surgical complications. Plastic surgery procedure lead to favor speed and immediate cosmetic results. For these reasons, leaving or " reusing " tissue from an existing capsule may seem more " gratifying " . However, adverse effects resulting from the practice are widespread but have not been well documented. Typically, patients who require removal of faulty implants and undergo immediate re- implantation in the same prosthetic site habitually relapse with the same problem which motivated the previous surgery; the most common example is exchange of implants and/or sectorizing or bisecting the capsule without removing it completely. Such patients rarely achieve a significant capsular correction and habitually return for more similar surgery. A more illustrative situation is that where patients do not receive replacement implants. They form the basis of knowledge for evaluating the risks that arise from remaining capsules. An example is described in a paper published in 1993 (Copeland, M., Kessel, A., Spiera, H., Hermann, G., Bleiweiss, I. J.; Systemic Inflammatory Disorder Related To Fibrous Breast Capsules After Silicone Implant Removal; Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery: 92 (6), 1179-1181, 1993): reported problems derived primarily from immune phenomena and inflammatory syndromes with pain, swelling, serologic abnormalities and alarming radiologic presentation. Numerous similar cases have been noted amongst implant patients but have not been the object of publications. Some are cited in FDA Reaction Reports. Others appear in the US Pharmacopoeia Reporting Programs. A residual capsule is not a stable entity. It may collapse upon completion of surgery and remain asymptomatic for some time, however, it will fill with extracellular fluid and remain as a fluid-filled space with added blood and prosthetic debris. As the wall matures and the breast remodels to accommodate the loss of the prostheses, the capsular tissue shrinks. Water as well as electrolytes are expelled gradually from the pocket or else the mixture is concentrated from leakage of water from the semi- permeable capsular membrane wall. In most cases, calcium salts precipitate during that stage and may render the capsule visible as a radiodense and speckled zone in radiographic projections. Prosthetic debris is also radiodense and may be imaged to further complicate the presentation. The average size of the residual capsules after 6-12 months is in the 2-7 cm range: most are compact, comparatively small and dense. Surgical removal should present no difficulty for most patients if adequate radiographic information is available. Later stages of maturation include the thickening of the capsule wall, sometimes reaching 0.5-1cm. Compression of the debris into a cluster of nodules which actually become calcifies follows for some patients. A few mimic malignancies. Others appear as small " prostheses " during mammographic studies. They are alarming to oncologists and are habitually signaled for further studies or biopsies by oncologic radiologists. In light of the present knowledge and considering the probable content of the residual closed capsules, an open or needle biopsy is not advisable. The risks of releasing significant amounts of hazardous contamination and possibly spreading infective entities outweighs the advantage of the diagnostic. At any rate, such a capsule requires removal for mitigation of symptoms and a more direct surgical approach appears more economical and less risky. In summary, a capsule with a dense fibro-collagenous wall behaves as a bioreactor. Worse yet, it is fitted with a semi-permeable wall that may periodically open to release its content to the breast. The probability of finding the space colonized with atypical microorganisms is elevated and the control of infective processes by classic pharmacologic approaches is difficult if not impossible. Such closed capsular spaces may be comparable to " artificial organs " of unpredictable functions. Their behavior will depend on the content and the age of the structure, its maturity and the history of the patient. There is a high probability that these capsules will continue to evolve for many years, adding more layers of fibro-collagenous tissue and possibly granulomatous material. If bacterial entities are present within the capsule space, they can culminate in large breast abscesses with will resist conservative treatments. Even with less active capsules containing mostly oily and calcitic debris, the thickening of the wall leads eventually to solid " tumor- like structures " and are, by themselves, alarming on auscultation and self examination. At best, such structures are unique environments for protein denaturation and aberrant biochemical reactions with unknown long term consequences. Pierre Blais, PhD Innoval, 496 Westminster Ave., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada KeA 2V1 613.728-8688, Fax: 613.728- 0687 Pierre Blais, PhD received his undergraduate and graduate degrees in physical- organic polymer chemistry from McGill University in Montreal, Canada, and a Postdoctorate Fellowship in biomaterials engineering at Case Western University in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1976 he became one of the first scientists to join the medical devices and radiological health program of the Department of Health and Welfare in Canada. He left the department in 1989 as Senior Scientific Advisor and formed Innoval Consultants, a firm engaged in the design, testing and failure analysis of high risk medical systems. He has authored over 250 publications on medical materials and their interactions with living tissues. SPECTRUM OF HISTOLOGICAL CHANGES REACTIVE TO PROSTHETIC BREAST IMPLANTS: A CLINOPATHOLOGICAL STUDY OF 84 PATIENTS Author: Yeoh G; P; E Address: Hampson Pathology, Westmead, NSW. Source: Pathology, August, 1996, 28:3, 232- 5 Abstract: A wide range of host reactions can be produced in response to prosthetic breast implants. Although the spectrum of histological changes is well described in the literature, the chronology and relative occurrence of these changes are not well documented. Examination of 161 capsulectomy specimens from 84 women suggested the following chronological sequence of tissue response: fibrous scar tissue; histiocyte response; foreign body giant cell reaction to extruded or exposed material including polyurethane and Dacron patch; synovial-like metaplasia; and calcification. Fibrous scar tissue was seen in all implants. Histiocytic response was noted in 107/161 of the specimens and a foreign body giant cell reaction to polyurethane was seen only in the two Meme implants. Synovial-like metaplasia was less common than previously reported, occurring in 45/161 of specimens after a mean in situ duration of 11.7 years. This peculiar process was seen only in association with a prominent histiocytic response and was not associated with calcification. Dystrophic calcification, which has been reported as occurring rarely in implant capsules, was seen in 15/161 of our specimens after a mean in situ duration of 17.7 years. PATHOLOGICAL AND BIOPHYSCIAL FINDINGS ASSOCIATED WITH SILICONE BREAST IMPLANTS: A STUDY OF CAPSULAR TISSUES FROM 86 CASES Author: Luke JL; Kalasinsky VF; Turnicky RP; Centeno JA; FB; Mullick FG Address: Department of Environmental and Toxicologic Pathology, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, D.C. 20306-6000, USA. Source: Plast Reconstr Surg, November, 1997, 100:6, 1558- 65 Abstract: Breast implant capsular tissues from 86 cases were studied to characterize the relationship between capsular findings and the type of implant used. Tissues were examined by light microscopy, immunohistochemistry, scanning electron microscopy/energy dispersive x-ray analysis and Fourier transform infrared, and Raman microspectroscopy. Capsular pathology was influenced by the structure and composition of the implant. A pseudoepithelium at the inner capsular surface (synovial metaplasia) was noted with silicone gel-filled, saline-filled, and polyurethane- coated implants, and disproportionately with textured surface implants. Immunohistochemical studies of pseudoepithelium supported a macrophage/histiocyte cellular origin. Talc was identified intracellularly within macrophages in 42 cases. Capsular calcification was strongly associated with the presence of implant stabilization patch material. Infrared spectra were used to identify silicone, talc, Dacron, and two different types of polyurethane in capsular tissues. Micropapillary structures identified at the pseudoepithelial surface have, to the authors' knowledge, not been previously described. PHYSIOLOGIC AND PATHOLOGIC PATTERNS OF REACTION TO SILICONE BREAST IMPLANTS Author: Friemann J; Bauer M; Golz B; Rombeck N; Höhr D; Erbs G; Steinau HU; Olbrisch RR Address: Abteilung fÂur Umweltpathologie des Medizinischen Instituts fÂur Umwelthygiene, Heinrich-Heine-UniversitÂat DÂusseldorf. Source: Zentralbl Chir, 1997, 122:7, 551-64 Abstract: Local morphological reaction patterns on breast implants can be of high significance as possible starting point for controversely discussed systemic immune response triggered by silicon or silicone. Therefore, the collagenous capsules of 149 explanted mammoplasty prostheses were examined macroscopically, under a scanning electron microscope and light- microscopically using antibodies to the macrophage antigen CD68, vimentin, muscle actin, and the proliferation antigen MIB1, and were then correlated with anamnestic data (implanted type of prosthesis, indication for im- or explantation). According to our examinations, the in-vivo durability of the prostheses' shells is considerably decreasing with the expansion of their surfaces. Regardless of the type of the prostheses' surface regularly a chronic- proliferating inflammation pattern could be identified in the periprosthetic capsulectomy specimens starting with a synovial metaplasia of proliferating CD-68-negative and vimentin-positive mesenchymal cells in the area surrounding the implants and ending by its transformation into a stage of dense hyaline collagenous fibrous tissue after an advanced implantation period (> 2 years). By this, the texturing of the prosthesis surface modifies only the course, but not the quality of the chronically fibrosing inflammation. Bleeding of prosthesis as well as the incorporation of the polyurethane-foam coating of different prosthesis types into the periprosthetic breast capsule lead to a significant lymphoplasmacytic infiltration, partly with participation of local vessels as defined in a " silicone vasculitis " . Morphological signs of an at least local immune response are detectable in 8.3% of the examined fibrotic capsules even without a morphologically identifiable foreign-body embedding. They can be possibly referred to- as well as the complete absence of hyaline collagenous fibrous tissue in 30% of the cases-a yet not causally clarified, inter-individually different susceptibility of the implant bearers. Only the systematic registration of the above-mentioned morphological reaction patterns in a " prosthesis- passport " together with the additional clinical observation of the patients can ensure in future the realistic estimation of potential health risks caused by silicone breast implants. HISTOLOGIC FEATURES OF BREAST CAPSULES REFLECT SURFACE CONFIGURATION AND COMPOSITION OF SILICONE BAG IMPLANTS Author: Kasper CS Address: Baylor University Medical Center, Department of Pathology, Dallas, Texas. Source: Am J Clin Pathol, November, 1994, 102:5, 655-9 Abstract: The fibrous capsules that develop around silicone gel breast implants may become excessively thickened and result in painful hardened breasts. This article examines the microscopic anatomy of 80 periprosthetic breast capsules removed during a 2-year period (1990-1992), and describes the histopathologic characteristics of capsules adjacent to the more recently modified implant types. Capsules were examined by routine light microscopy, with and without polarization. Several distinctive histologic patterns were recognized, and these unique patterns could be correlated with the implant type used. All capsules were lined by a cellular membrane resembling synovium. Capsules adjacent to smooth-surfaced implants were lined by an intact histiocytic membrane of uniform thickness. In contrast, the membrane adjacent to textured implants varied in thickness, and was disrupted along its length. In addition, the inner surface of capsules adjacent to textured implants was conspicuously festooned with small (.25 to .5 mm) knob-like projections that were not seen in capsules adjacent to smooth-surfaced implants. A variety of foreign materials also were observed either within or adjacent to the capsules, and included droplets of liquid silicone, irregular solid fragments of the bag envelope, geometric crystalline fragments of polyurethane, and talc. Thus, the microanatomic features of periprosthetic breast capsules reflect the composition and surface configuration of the corresponding silicone bag type. CAPSULE QUALITY SALINE-FILLED SMOOTH SILICONE, TEXTURED SILICONE, AND POLYURETHANE IMPLANT SIN RABBITS: A LONG-TERM STUDY Author: Bucky LP; Ehrlich HP; Sohoni S; May JW Jr Address: Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. Source: Plast Reconstr Surg, May, 1994, 93:6, 1123-31; discussion 1132-3 Abstract: Recently, there have been many new designs in both the surface texture and chemical composition of breast implants that claim reduced constrictive capsular formation. The purpose of this study was to utilize a quantitative method to determine the firmness of capsules formed around saline-filled smooth silicone, textured silicone, and polyurethane implants in an experimental rabbit model 1 year after implantation. Our objective was to analyze the histologic, biologic, and biochemical content of the respective capsules to account for any differences in physical behavior. Forty- five smooth silicone, textured silicone, and polyurethane implants were placed in one of three positions beneath the panniculus carnosus muscle of New Zealand White rabbits. After 1 year, all capsules were palpated and classified according to firmness. Intracapsular static and dynamic pressure measurements were obtained by placing a pressure monitor (Stryker) in an injector port attached to the individual implants. Capsular firmness was significantly greater in the textured silicone implants than in the smooth silicone or polyurethane implants after 1 year. The dynamic qualities of the periprosthetic soft tissues were measured while saline was injected into the implants. The capsules around the textured silicone implants generated significantly higher pressures than the smooth silicone or polyurethane counterparts. The capsules around the polyurethane implants were the softest and most compliant in all categories. Histologically, there is a significant inflammatory response surrounding the textured silicone implants that does not exist in the capsules around the smooth silicone implants. The capsules around the polyurethane implants have the least fibrous tissue deposition. There is a decrease in the proportion of type III collagen in the capsules around the textured silicone implants versus smooth silicone or polyurethane implants. The in vitro contraction patterns of the fibroblast-populated collagen lattices do not reveal the contraction differences observed in vivo in rabbits. However, there are many components that determine contractility. This area deserves further investigation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 ANALYSIS OF SILICONE LEVELS IN CAPSULES OF GEL AND SALINE BREAST IMPLANTS AND PENILE PROSTHESES Authors: s W.; D.; Lugowski S.; McHugh A.; Keresteci A.; Baines C. Address: Division of Plastic Surgery, Wellesley Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Source: ls Plastic Surgery, June, 1995, 34:6, 578- 84 Abstract: Although a potential link between silicone-gel breast implants and autoimmune connective tissue disease has been suggested, none has been proven. The potential role of silicone as an immune adjuvant remains very controversial. Currently available techniques do not allow precise measurements of silicone in tissues. However, all compounds containing silicon (including silicone) can be measured accurately. The present study was designed to measure silicon levels in the fibrous capsules of patients with silicone-gel breast implants, saline breast implants, and silicone inflatable penile prostheses. Baseline control silicon levels were obtained from the breast tissue of patients undergoing breast reduction, who had no exposure to breast implants. All silicon measurements were carried out using atomic absorption spectrometry with a graphite furnace. Silicon was measured in a normal heptane extract of silicone from dried tissue. The mean silicon levels in 16 breast tissue control samples from 8 patients undergoing breast reduction varied from 0.025 to 0.742 micrograms/gm with the median mean being 0.0927. The median silicon level in capsules from six patients with saline implants was 7.7 micrograms/gm (range; 1.9- 36.6 micrograms/gm; averages 8,300% or 83 times more than those without a silicone implant). The median silicon level in capsules from five patients with silicone inflatable penile prostheses was 19.5 micrograms/gm (range; 1.9-34.8 micrograms/gm; .0927 divided by 19.5 = 21,000% more than those without any type silicone implant). Although the levels of silicon in capsules of patients with saline breast prostheses and penile implants were higher than in control samples, they were much lower than those from the capsules of the 58 gel implants (median; 9,979 micrograms/gm; range, 371-152,000 micrograms/gm; almost 108,000 times as much silicone in capsules Vs those without any type silicone implant). BREAST CAPSULE PERSISTENCE AFTER BREAST IMPLANT REMOVAL Authors: W. Bradford Rockwell, M.D., Holly D. Casey, M.D., and A. Cheng, M.D., Salt Lake City, Utah Source: Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Journal, 101: 1085, 1998 Breast implant capsules are a foreign body immune response to breast implants. It has been proposed that capsulectomy after breast implant removal was unnecessary, as the body resorbs the capsule when the implant, the impetus for the foreign body response, is removed. We report eight women with persistent capsules 10 months to 17 years after silicone breast implant removal. COMPLICATIONS RELATED TO RETAINED BREAST IMPLANT CAPSULES Author: Hardt, N. S.; Yu, L.; LaTorre, G.; Steinbach, B. Address: Dept. Pathology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL. Source: Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Journal, Feb., 1995, 95:2, 364-71 Abstract: Citing evidence that breast implant-related capsules resolve uneventfully, surgeons have elected to leave the capsules in place when implants are removed because capsulectomy adds both morbidity and expense to the procedure. However, recent clinical and histopathologic evidence suggests that uneventful resolution is not always the case, and several potential problems may arise from retained capsules after removal of the implant. Retained implant capsules may result in a spiculated mass suspicious for carcinoma, dense calcifications that obscure neighboring breast tissue on subsequent imaging studies, and cystic masses due to persistent serous effusion, expansile hematoma, or encapsulated silicone filled cysts. Furthermore, retained capsules are a reservoir of implant-related foreign material in the case of silicone gel-filled implants and textured implants promoting tissue ingrowth. To avoid complications from retained capsules, total capsulectomy or postoperative surveillance should be offered to patients. LETTER BY DR. SHANKLIN TO AN INSURANCE COMPANY REGARDING NECESSITY OF A TOTAL CAPSULECTOMY September 16, 1996 To Whom It May Concern: This communication is prompted by a form letter received by one of my patients from Florida which advised her that silicone implant removal would be covered as medically necessary but not device capsulectomy. It has been said, if you stay in medical practice long enough, just about everything will occur: in this case, a health insurer unbundling their own coverage! (Letter Dated August ,1995 from Aetna says, "Based on a review of the submitted data, we are unable to allow benefits for bilateral capsulectomies. Charges for removal of silicone gel-filled implants are covered when medically necessary." Hopefully, my suit has cured them of this! The interesting part starts; read on!): Let me start with the last sentence of the letter, an attribution of the American College of Rheumatology (from Aetna's letter; "The American College of Rheumatology advises there is no evidence to support an association between systemic disease and the implants.") A statement was made to that effect at their annual meeting in San Francisco last October but it was not a policy statement. It was an unauthorized press release by the outgoing president which has since been retracted. In addition, the special study group of the ACR for silicone diseases is now ready to report. We are told criteria have been developed which permit a differential diagnosis of silicone disease (Siliconosis) from other connective tissue diseases. There is a remarkably large body of medical and scientific literature on these matters which emphatically shows the capsule is the site of the illness. It is one thing to debunk the patient of silicone load by explantation but unless the capsules come out at the same time the immunopathic process will continue unabated. The standard is not whether something is usual our customary, but whether it is the correct and logical thing to do. Please reexamine your policy on this matter. In the long run, the better health of these patients will be well served by doing the right thing: explantation with capsulectomy, a continuous and coherent procedure appropriate to the underlying pathology. A rational policy of this sort will also serve the financial fiduciary requirements of your firm over time. Such has been the experience of this clinic. Sincerely Yours, DOUGLAS R. SHANKLIN, M. D., F.R.S.M. Professor of Pathology and of Obstetrics and Gynecology Dr. Shanklin: 1-901-227- 7695 YEAH FOR DR. SHANKLIN! RESIDUAL CAPSULE AND INTERCAPSULAR DEBRIS AS LONG-TERM RISK FACTORS By: Dr. Pierre Blais, PhD Contamination of the space between the capsule and the implants by micro- organisms, silicone oils, degradation products and gel impurities constitutes a major problem which potentates the risk of implants. Such problems include inflammation, infection, deposition of mineral debris, as well as certain autoimmune phenomena. These problems can be present when implants are in situ (in the body) and are often attributable to the implant. The logical expectation is that, upon removal of the implants, adverse effects will cease. This is an unjustifiably optimistic view. It is well documented from case histories that removal and or replacement of implants without exhaustive debridement of the prosthetic site leads to failure and post surgical complications. Plastic surgery procedure lead to favor speed and immediate cosmetic results. For these reasons, leaving or "reusing" tissue from an existing capsule may seem more "gratifying". However, adverse effects resulting from the practice are widespread but have not been well documented. Typically, patients who require removal of faulty implants and undergo immediate re- implantation in the same prosthetic site habitually relapse with the same problem which motivated the previous surgery; the most common example is exchange of implants and/or sectorizing or bisecting the capsule without removing it completely. Such patients rarely achieve a significant capsular correction and habitually return for more similar surgery. A more illustrative situation is that where patients do not receive replacement implants. They form the basis of knowledge for evaluating the risks that arise from remaining capsules. An example is described in a paper published in 1993 (Copeland, M., Kessel, A., Spiera, H., Hermann, G., Bleiweiss, I. J.; Systemic Inflammatory Disorder Related To Fibrous Breast Capsules After Silicone Implant Removal; Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery: 92 (6), 1179-1181, 1993): reported problems derived primarily from immune phenomena and inflammatory syndromes with pain, swelling, serologic abnormalities and alarming radiologic presentation. Numerous similar cases have been noted amongst implant patients but have not been the object of publications. Some are cited in FDA Reaction Reports. Others appear in the US Pharmacopoeia Reporting Programs. A residual capsule is not a stable entity. It may collapse upon completion of surgery and remain asymptomatic for some time, however, it will fill with extracellular fluid and remain as a fluid-filled space with added blood and prosthetic debris. As the wall matures and the breast remodels to accommodate the loss of the prostheses, the capsular tissue shrinks. Water as well as electrolytes are expelled gradually from the pocket or else the mixture is concentrated from leakage of water from the semi- permeable capsular membrane wall. In most cases, calcium salts precipitate during that stage and may render the capsule visible as a radiodense and speckled zone in radiographic projections. Prosthetic debris is also radiodense and may be imaged to further complicate the presentation. The average size of the residual capsules after 6-12 months is in the 2-7 cm range: most are compact, comparatively small and dense. Surgical removal should present no difficulty for most patients if adequate radiographic information is available. Later stages of maturation include the thickening of the capsule wall, sometimes reaching 0.5-1cm. Compression of the debris into a cluster of nodules which actually become calcifies follows for some patients. A few mimic malignancies. Others appear as small "prostheses" during mammographic studies. They are alarming to oncologists and are habitually signaled for further studies or biopsies by oncologic radiologists. In light of the present knowledge and considering the probable content of the residual closed capsules, an open or needle biopsy is not advisable. The risks of releasing significant amounts of hazardous contamination and possibly spreading infective entities outweighs the advantage of the diagnostic. At any rate, such a capsule requires removal for mitigation of symptoms and a more direct surgical approach appears more economical and less risky. In summary, a capsule with a dense fibro-collagenous wall behaves as a bioreactor. Worse yet, it is fitted with a semi-permeable wall that may periodically open to release its content to the breast. The probability of finding the space colonized with atypical microorganisms is elevated and the control of infective processes by classic pharmacologic approaches is difficult if not impossible. Such closed capsular spaces may be comparable to "artificial organs" of unpredictable functions. Their behavior will depend on the content and the age of the structure, its maturity and the history of the patient. There is a high probability that these capsules will continue to evolve for many years, adding more layers of fibro-collagenous tissue and possibly granulomatous material. If bacterial entities are present within the capsule space, they can culminate in large breast abscesses with will resist conservative treatments. Even with less active capsules containing mostly oily and calcitic debris, the thickening of the wall leads eventually to solid "tumor- like structures" and are, by themselves, alarming on auscultation and self examination. At best, such structures are unique environments for protein denaturation and aberrant biochemical reactions with unknown long term consequences. Pierre Blais, PhD Innoval, 496 Westminster Ave., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada KeA 2V1 613.728-8688, Fax: 613.728- 0687 Pierre Blais, PhD received his undergraduate and graduate degrees in physical- organic polymer chemistry from McGill University in Montreal, Canada, and a Postdoctorate Fellowship in biomaterials engineering at Case Western University in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1976 he became one of the first scientists to join the medical devices and radiological health program of the Department of Health and Welfare in Canada. He left the department in 1989 as Senior Scientific Advisor and formed Innoval Consultants, a firm engaged in the design, testing and failure analysis of high risk medical systems. He has authored over 250 publications on medical materials and their interactions with living tissues. SPECTRUM OF HISTOLOGICAL CHANGES REACTIVE TO PROSTHETIC BREAST IMPLANTS: A CLINOPATHOLOGICAL STUDY OF 84 PATIENTS Author: Yeoh G; P; E Address: Hampson Pathology, Westmead, NSW. Source: Pathology, August, 1996, 28:3, 232- 5 Abstract: A wide range of host reactions can be produced in response to prosthetic breast implants. Although the spectrum of histological changes is well described in the literature, the chronology and relative occurrence of these changes are not well documented. Examination of 161 capsulectomy specimens from 84 women suggested the following chronological sequence of tissue response: fibrous scar tissue; histiocyte response; foreign body giant cell reaction to extruded or exposed material including polyurethane and Dacron patch; synovial-like metaplasia; and calcification. Fibrous scar tissue was seen in all implants. Histiocytic response was noted in 107/161 of the specimens and a foreign body giant cell reaction to polyurethane was seen only in the two Meme implants. Synovial-like metaplasia was less common than previously reported, occurring in 45/161 of specimens after a mean in situ duration of 11.7 years. This peculiar process was seen only in association with a prominent histiocytic response and was not associated with calcification. Dystrophic calcification, which has been reported as occurring rarely in implant capsules, was seen in 15/161 of our specimens after a mean in situ duration of 17.7 years. PATHOLOGICAL AND BIOPHYSCIAL FINDINGS ASSOCIATED WITH SILICONE BREAST IMPLANTS: A STUDY OF CAPSULAR TISSUES FROM 86 CASES Author: Luke JL; Kalasinsky VF; Turnicky RP; Centeno JA; FB; Mullick FG Address: Department of Environmental and Toxicologic Pathology, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, D.C. 20306-6000, USA. Source: Plast Reconstr Surg, November, 1997, 100:6, 1558- 65 Abstract: Breast implant capsular tissues from 86 cases were studied to characterize the relationship between capsular findings and the type of implant used. Tissues were examined by light microscopy, immunohistochemistry, scanning electron microscopy/energy dispersive x-ray analysis and Fourier transform infrared, and Raman microspectroscopy. Capsular pathology was influenced by the structure and composition of the implant. A pseudoepithelium at the inner capsular surface (synovial metaplasia) was noted with silicone gel-filled, saline-filled, and polyurethane- coated implants, and disproportionately with textured surface implants. Immunohistochemical studies of pseudoepithelium supported a macrophage/histiocyte cellular origin. Talc was identified intracellularly within macrophages in 42 cases. Capsular calcification was strongly associated with the presence of implant stabilization patch material. Infrared spectra were used to identify silicone, talc, Dacron, and two different types of polyurethane in capsular tissues. Micropapillary structures identified at the pseudoepithelial surface have, to the authors' knowledge, not been previously described. PHYSIOLOGIC AND PATHOLOGIC PATTERNS OF REACTION TO SILICONE BREAST IMPLANTS Author: Friemann J; Bauer M; Golz B; Rombeck N; H�hr D; Erbs G; Steinau HU; Olbrisch RR Address: Abteilung f�ur Umweltpathologie des Medizinischen Instituts f�ur Umwelthygiene, Heinrich-Heine-Universit�at D�usseldorf. Source: Zentralbl Chir, 1997, 122:7, 551-64 Abstract: Local morphological reaction patterns on breast implants can be of high significance as possible starting point for controversely discussed systemic immune response triggered by silicon or silicone. Therefore, the collagenous capsules of 149 explanted mammoplasty prostheses were examined macroscopically, under a scanning electron microscope and light- microscopically using antibodies to the macrophage antigen CD68, vimentin, muscle actin, and the proliferation antigen MIB1, and were then correlated with anamnestic data (implanted type of prosthesis, indication for im- or explantation). According to our examinations, the in-vivo durability of the prostheses' shells is considerably decreasing with the expansion of their surfaces. Regardless of the type of the prostheses' surface regularly a chronic- proliferating inflammation pattern could be identified in the periprosthetic capsulectomy specimens starting with a synovial metaplasia of proliferating CD-68-negative and vimentin-positive mesenchymal cells in the area surrounding the implants and ending by its transformation into a stage of dense hyaline collagenous fibrous tissue after an advanced implantation period (> 2 years). By this, the texturing of the prosthesis surface modifies only the course, but not the quality of the chronically fibrosing inflammation. Bleeding of prosthesis as well as the incorporation of the polyurethane-foam coating of different prosthesis types into the periprosthetic breast capsule lead to a significant lymphoplasmacytic infiltration, partly with participation of local vessels as defined in a "silicone vasculitis". Morphological signs of an at least local immune response are detectable in 8.3% of the examined fibrotic capsules even without a morphologically identifiable foreign-body embedding. They can be possibly referred to- as well as the complete absence of hyaline collagenous fibrous tissue in 30% of the cases-a yet not causally clarified, inter-individually different susceptibility of the implant bearers. Only the systematic registration of the above-mentioned morphological reaction patterns in a "prosthesis- passport" together with the additional clinical observation of the patients can ensure in future the realistic estimation of potential health risks caused by silicone breast implants. HISTOLOGIC FEATURES OF BREAST CAPSULES REFLECT SURFACE CONFIGURATION AND COMPOSITION OF SILICONE BAG IMPLANTS Author: Kasper CS Address: Baylor University Medical Center, Department of Pathology, Dallas, Texas. Source: Am J Clin Pathol, November, 1994, 102:5, 655-9 Abstract: The fibrous capsules that develop around silicone gel breast implants may become excessively thickened and result in painful hardened breasts. This article examines the microscopic anatomy of 80 periprosthetic breast capsules removed during a 2-year period (1990-1992), and describes the histopathologic characteristics of capsules adjacent to the more recently modified implant types. Capsules were examined by routine light microscopy, with and without polarization. Several distinctive histologic patterns were recognized, and these unique patterns could be correlated with the implant type used. All capsules were lined by a cellular membrane resembling synovium. Capsules adjacent to smooth-surfaced implants were lined by an intact histiocytic membrane of uniform thickness. In contrast, the membrane adjacent to textured implants varied in thickness, and was disrupted along its length. In addition, the inner surface of capsules adjacent to textured implants was conspicuously festooned with small (.25 to .5 mm) knob-like projections that were not seen in capsules adjacent to smooth-surfaced implants. A variety of foreign materials also were observed either within or adjacent to the capsules, and included droplets of liquid silicone, irregular solid fragments of the bag envelope, geometric crystalline fragments of polyurethane, and talc. Thus, the microanatomic features of periprosthetic breast capsules reflect the composition and surface configuration of the corresponding silicone bag type. CAPSULE QUALITY SALINE-FILLED SMOOTH SILICONE, TEXTURED SILICONE, AND POLYURETHANE IMPLANT SIN RABBITS: A LONG-TERM STUDY Author: Bucky LP; Ehrlich HP; Sohoni S; May JW Jr Address: Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. Source: Plast Reconstr Surg, May, 1994, 93:6, 1123-31; discussion 1132-3 Abstract: Recently, there have been many new designs in both the surface texture and chemical composition of breast implants that claim reduced constrictive capsular formation. The purpose of this study was to utilize a quantitative method to determine the firmness of capsules formed around saline-filled smooth silicone, textured silicone, and polyurethane implants in an experimental rabbit model 1 year after implantation. Our objective was to analyze the histologic, biologic, and biochemical content of the respective capsules to account for any differences in physical behavior. Forty- five smooth silicone, textured silicone, and polyurethane implants were placed in one of three positions beneath the panniculus carnosus muscle of New Zealand White rabbits. After 1 year, all capsules were palpated and classified according to firmness. Intracapsular static and dynamic pressure measurements were obtained by placing a pressure monitor (Stryker) in an injector port attached to the individual implants. Capsular firmness was significantly greater in the textured silicone implants than in the smooth silicone or polyurethane implants after 1 year. The dynamic qualities of the periprosthetic soft tissues were measured while saline was injected into the implants. The capsules around the textured silicone implants generated significantly higher pressures than the smooth silicone or polyurethane counterparts. The capsules around the polyurethane implants were the softest and most compliant in all categories. Histologically, there is a significant inflammatory response surrounding the textured silicone implants that does not exist in the capsules around the smooth silicone implants. The capsules around the polyurethane implants have the least fibrous tissue deposition. There is a decrease in the proportion of type III collagen in the capsules around the textured silicone implants versus smooth silicone or polyurethane implants. The in vitro contraction patterns of the fibroblast-populated collagen lattices do not reveal the contraction differences observed in vivo in rabbits. However, there are many components that determine contractility. This area deserves further investigation. Opinions expressed are NOT meant to take the place of advice given by licensed health care professionals. Consult your physician or licensed health care professional before commencing any medical treatment. "Do not let either the medical authorities or the politicians mislead you. Find out what the facts are, and make your own decisions about how to live a happy life and how to work for a better world." - Linus ing, two-time Nobel Prize Winner (1954, Chemistry; 1963, Peace) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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