Preclotting is mandatory prior to implanting a knitted polyester arterial graft, unless the structure is made impermeable to blood by coating with a bioerodible material. Before achieving wide-spread clinical acceptance, the technique of impregnating with cross-linked albumin must be optimized in order to develop a graft that is immediately implantable, easy to handle and suture and has improved healing characteristics. The choice of the chemical to cross-link the albumin is of paramount importance. In this study two alternative candidates have been evaluated by using a series of tests to measure the physical properties, the morphology and the cytocompatibility of albumin-coated grafts. A carbodiimide cross-linking agent appears more promising than glutaraldehyde, since it is equally effective in producing a blood impermeable prosthesis, yet presents improved biocompatibility and provokes a less intense inflammatory response from the host.