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1.
Comput Biol Med ; 145: 105524, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35447462

RESUMO

A covered stent has been used to treat carotid artery stenosis to reduce the chance of embolization, as it offers improved performance over bare-metal stents. However, membrane infolding of covered stents can affect efficiency and functionality for treating occlusive disease of first-order aortic branches. In order to mitigate the degree of infolding of the stent once it was re-expanded, we proposed a new coating method performed on the pre-crimped stent. A systematic study was carried out to evaluate this new coating technique: a) in vivo animal testing to determine the degree of membrane infolding; b) structural finite element modeling and simulation were used to evaluate the mechanical performance of the covered stent; and c) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to evaluate hemodynamic behavior of the stents and risk of thrombosis after stent deployment. The degree of infolding was substantially reduced as demonstrated by the in vivo deployment of the pre-crimped stent compared to a conventional dip-coated stent. The structural analysis results demonstrated that the membrane of the covered stent manufactured by conventional dip-coating resulted in a large degree of infolding but this could be minimized by our new pre-crimped coating method. CFD studies showed that the new coating method reduced the risk of thrombosis compared to the conventional coating method. In conclusion, both simulation and in vivo testing demonstrate that our new pre-crimped coating method reduces membrane infolding compared with the conventional dip-coating method and may reduce risk of thrombosis.


Assuntos
Estenose das Carótidas , Trombose , Animais , Simulação por Computador , Hemodinâmica , Stents
2.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32532364

RESUMO

To select animals of appropriate size for preclinical studies of cardiovascular devices, reference knowledge of the cardiovascularanatomy relative to body weight is crucial. We measured the luminal diameters of the arteries (carotid, femoral, and iliac arteries) that are the common access vessels for endovascular and vascular procedures in Yorkshire×Landrace swine. Measurements were performed by using both ultrasound and angiographic methods and were correlated with body weight. Results showed no statistically significant difference between the left and right vessels in the diameters of the carotid,femoral, and iliac arteries. The diameters of the measured arteries showed high correlation with animal weight in pigs thatweighed less than 70 kg.

3.
ACS Biomater Sci Eng ; 5(11): 6216-6230, 2019 Nov 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33405529

RESUMO

Bare metal stenting (BMS) does not adequately address the atheroembolic characteristic of carotid artery stenosis. While simple covered stents (CS) may prevent dislodged fragments of the atherosclerotic plaque from entering the blood stream, they also block blood flow into the major branches of the artery alongside the lesion, which is not desirable. Preferential covered stents (PCS) behave as a covered stent in a tubular part of a vessel but maintain side-branch flow over the bifurcation region by means of slits in the membrane. Stent design, membrane material, and slits configuration are the three main components contributing to stent performance. Optimization of PCS designs was conducted and tested. METHODS: A newly designed BMS was developed and compared to a commercially available peripheral stent. Two materials (expanded poly(tetrafluoroethylene)) and silicone polyurethane co-polymers (Elast-eon E2A) were used as stent coverings with slits applied using various cutting methods to form the PCS. These PCS samples were tested for physical resilience, flexibility, ability to preserve side-branch flow, slit edge roughness, and platelet activation. RESULTS: Fabrication of E2A-coated stents required pretreatment of the stent with poly(ethylene glycol) to achieve firm attachment. The newly designed BMS with nine crowns design and larger cell size showed higher flexibility than commercially available stents. A combination of a larger stent cell size, E2A membrane coating, and three slits per stent cell unit configuration resulted in preserved side-branch flow similar to physiological conditions in the flow experiment. Slit edge roughness changed with different cutting methods and laser machine cutting parameters. In vitro studies showed platelet activation was minimal with lower slit edge roughness samples. CONCLUSION: An optimized PCS prototype was developed consisting of a newly designed stent, E2A membrane, and a three-slit pattern created by specific femtosecond laser cutting.

4.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 62: 607-618, 2016 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27315372

RESUMO

The mitral valve (MV) is a highly complex cardiac valve consisting of an annulus, anterior and posterior leaflets, chordae tendineae (chords) and two papillary muscles. The chordae tendineae mechanics play a pivotal role in proper MV function: the chords help maintain proper leaflet coaptation and rupture of the chordae tendineae due to disease or aging can lead to mitral valve insufficiency. Therefore, the aim of this study was to characterize the mechanical properties of aged human and ovine mitral chordae tendineae. The human and ovine chordal specimens were categorized by insertion location (i.e., marginal, basal and strut) and leaflet type (i.e., anterior and posterior). The results show that human and ovine chords of differing types vary largely in size but do not have significantly different elastic and failure properties. The excess fibrous tissue layers surrounding the central core of human chords added thickness to the chords but did not contribute to the overall strength of the chords. In general, the thinner marginal chords were stiffer than the thicker basal and strut chords, and the anterior chords were stiffer and weaker than the posterior chords. The human chords of all types were significantly stiffer than the corresponding ovine chords and exhibited much lower failure strains. These findings can be explained by the diminished crimp pattern of collagen fibers of the human mitral chords observed histologically. Moreover, the mechanical testing data was modeled with the nonlinear hyperelastic Ogden strain energy function to facilitate accurate computational modeling of the human MV.


Assuntos
Cordas Tendinosas/fisiologia , Valva Mitral/fisiologia , Animais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Humanos , Insuficiência da Valva Mitral , Ovinos
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