Characterization of Silicone-polycarbonate-urethane/PDMS based Material for Polymeric Heart Valves
Conference Poster
Publication Date:
2014
abstract:
INTRODUCTION
Worldwide the increasing number of deaths per year
caused by heart valve diseases, made valve replacement
the most common surgical therapy. The research for
polymeric heart valves (PHV) has been proposed to
overcome problems such as no physiological flow
conditions, calcification and limited durability of the
currently available heart valves prostheses (mechanical
or biological). Segmented polyurethanes have been
utilized in medical devices since years due to their
established biocompatibility and excellent mechanical
properties, but their tendency to degradation hampered
their use in long-term implantation.
The aim of this work was to study a thermoplastic
copolymer chain of polycarbonate-polyurethane and
silicone [polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)] modified with
increasing percentages of extra-chain PDMS, for the
development of a novel single-body polymeric trileaflet
PHV made by a spray, phase-inversion
technique.
EXPERIMENTAL METHODS
CarboSil® (CS) in grain form was dissolved in
THF/DMAc 1:1 (v/v) to obtain a 2% (w/v) solution.
CarboSil® solutions containing 10% (CS10) and 30%
of PDMS (CS30) were obtained by a reaction under
stirring and nitrogen flow for 6 h at 82 °C. For each
materials planar patches were obtained by a spray,
phase-inversion technique on a rotating cylindrical
mandrel [1]. After materials deposition the patches were
placed for 1 h in dH2O to allow solvents removal, and
then pressed (50 g/cm2) during an heat treatment at
100°C for 90 min.
In vitro tests were carried out to evaluate the
biocompatibility, hemocompatibility, calcification [2],
hydrolytic degradation (ISO 13781: Sorensen buffer,
pH = 7.4), oxidative degradation [3], environmental
stress cracking (ESC) degradation [4] and mechanical
properties (ASTM D1708-02).
The material cytotoxicity was studied through
extraction method according to ISO-10993-5 on L929
fibroblasts; the hemocompatibility was assessed after 2
h of static blood contact to evaluate platelet adhesion,
activation and coagulation parameters.
After calcification and degradation tests, samples were
investigated by infrared analysis and SEM.
Uniaxial static tensile tests were performed until failure
on both longitudinal and transverse directions on a
computer controlled tensile testing machine (100 N load
cell). Ten samples were analysed for each materials. For
each samples stress-strain data, ultimate tensile strength
(UTS) and ultimate elongation (UE) were calculated.
A prototype of a tri-leaflet PHV, whose leaflets had the
same thickness (300 ?m) and characteristics of the
tested patches, was obtained by the spray technique. A
3D mould housing a stent, made by rapid-prototyping
technique, was used to reproduce the morphology of a
commercially available biological aortic valve and a 3D
counter-mould was used to press/cure the valve
prototype.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
All material extracts are devoid of any cytotoxic effects
on mouse fibroblasts, since no decrease in cell viability
(MTT test) and growth (BrdU proliferation test) was
observed in comparison with untreated cells.
CS30 material induced a lower in vitro platelets
adhesion than the CS one, while the coagulation times
were similar for all the tested materials.
SEM analysis demonstrated that CS10 and CS30
presented significantly less formation of spots of
calcification compared to CS. Infrared analysis
demonstrated no significant differences among CS,
CS10 e CS30 samples after the hydrolytic degradation
test. CS30 samples exhibited less susceptibility to
oxidative degradation and to ESC. Uniaxial tensile tests
show a decrease of the UTS for the CS10 and CS30
with respect to the CS material of about 32%. No
significant differences were found between all materials
as far as the UE value.
A single-body PHV prototype (Fig.
Iris type:
04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
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