Table 1.
Delivery method | Advantages | Limitations |
---|---|---|
Intracoronary artery infusion | Direct infusion infarct-related coronary artery cell engraftment homogenously at infarct borders | Not applicable to occluded artery. Possible micro embolism during infusion |
Surgical intramyocardial injection | Smaller number of cells required direct inspection | Increased risk of morbidity and mortality. Potential induction of arrhythmia. Need for a surgical approach |
Transendocardial injection | Cell delivery in occluded areas | The risk of myocardial perforation. Cardiac tamponade and ventricular arrhythmia |
Transvenous infusion | Non-invasive Simple delivery |
Possible micro embolism Low cellular migration and differentiation. Homing to non-cardiac organs |
Adapted from Ref. (50).