Fabrication of Compliant and Transparent Hollow Cerebral Vascular Phantoms for In Vitro Studies Using 3D Printing and Spin-Dip Coating.
Beatrice BisighiniPierluigi Di GiovanniAlba ScerratiFederica TrovalusciSilvia VescoPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Endovascular surgery through flow diverters and coils is increasingly used for the minimally invasive treatment of intracranial aneurysms. To study the effectiveness of these devices, in vitro tests are performed in which synthetic vascular phantoms are typically used to reproduce in vivo conditions. In this paper, we propose a manufacturing process to obtain compliant and transparent hollow vessel replicas to assess the mechanical behaviour of endovascular devices and perform flow measurements. The vessel models were obtained in three main steps. First, a mould was 3D-printed in a water-soluble material; two techniques, fusion deposition modelling and stereolithography, were compared for this purpose. Then, the mould was covered with a thin layer of silicone through spin-dip coating, and finally, when the silicone layer solidified, it was dissolved in a hot water bath. The final models were tested in terms of the quality of the final results, the mechanical properties of the silicone, thickness uniformity, and transparency properties. The proposed approach makes it possible to produce models of different sizes and complexity whose transparency and mechanical properties are suitable for in vitro experiments. Its applicability is demonstrated through idealised and patient-specific cases.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- water soluble
- room temperature
- density functional theory
- randomized controlled trial
- coronary artery bypass
- molecularly imprinted
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- robot assisted
- optical coherence tomography
- aortic dissection
- coronary artery disease
- transition metal
- organic matter
- mass spectrometry
- molecular dynamics
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- brain injury
- case control
- simultaneous determination
- solid phase extraction