TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanical analysis of ovine and pediatric pulmonary artery for heart valve stent design
AU - Cabrera, M.S.
AU - Oomens, C.W.J.
AU - Bouten, C.V.C.
AU - Bogers, A.J.J.C.
AU - Hoerstrup, S.P.
AU - Baaijens, F.P.T.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Transcatheter heart valve replacement is an attractive and promising technique for congenital as well as acquired heart valve disease. In this procedure, the replacement valve is mounted in a stent that is expanded at the aimed valve position and fixated by clamping. However, for this technique to be appropriate for pediatric patients, the material properties of the host tissue need to be determined to design stents that can be optimized for this particular application. In this study we performed equibiaxial tensile tests on four adult ovine pulmonary artery walls and compared the outcomes with one pediatric pulmonary artery. Results show that the pediatric pulmonary artery was significantly thinner (1.06±0.36. mm (mean±SD)) than ovine tissue (2.85±0.40. mm), considerably stiffer for strain values that exceed the physiological conditions (beyond 50% strain in the circumferential and 60% in the longitudinal direction), more anisotropic (with a significant difference in stiffness between the longitudinal and circumferential directions beyond 60% strain) and presented stronger non-linear stress-strain behavior at equivalent strains (beyond 26% strain) compared to ovine tissue. These discrepancies suggest that stents validated and optimized using the ovine pre-clinical model might not perform satisfactorily in pediatric patients. The material parameters derived from this study may be used to develop stent designs for both applications using computational models. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd.
AB - Transcatheter heart valve replacement is an attractive and promising technique for congenital as well as acquired heart valve disease. In this procedure, the replacement valve is mounted in a stent that is expanded at the aimed valve position and fixated by clamping. However, for this technique to be appropriate for pediatric patients, the material properties of the host tissue need to be determined to design stents that can be optimized for this particular application. In this study we performed equibiaxial tensile tests on four adult ovine pulmonary artery walls and compared the outcomes with one pediatric pulmonary artery. Results show that the pediatric pulmonary artery was significantly thinner (1.06±0.36. mm (mean±SD)) than ovine tissue (2.85±0.40. mm), considerably stiffer for strain values that exceed the physiological conditions (beyond 50% strain in the circumferential and 60% in the longitudinal direction), more anisotropic (with a significant difference in stiffness between the longitudinal and circumferential directions beyond 60% strain) and presented stronger non-linear stress-strain behavior at equivalent strains (beyond 26% strain) compared to ovine tissue. These discrepancies suggest that stents validated and optimized using the ovine pre-clinical model might not perform satisfactorily in pediatric patients. The material parameters derived from this study may be used to develop stent designs for both applications using computational models. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd.
U2 - 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2013.04.020
DO - 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2013.04.020
M3 - Article
C2 - 23849135
SN - 0021-9290
VL - 46
SP - 2075
EP - 2081
JO - Journal of Biomechanics
JF - Journal of Biomechanics
IS - 12
ER -