Matching Static and Dynamic Compliance of Small-Diameter Arteries, with Poly(lactide-co-caprolactone) Copolymers: In Vitro and In Vivo Studies.
Jean-Marc BehrScott Alexander IrvineChaw-Su ThwinAnkur Harish ShahMin-Chul Kraun BaeEyal ZussmanSubramanian S VenkatramanPublished in: Macromolecular bioscience (2020)
Mechanical mismatch between vascular grafts and blood vessels is a major cause of smaller diameter vascular graft failure. To minimize this mismatch, several poly-l-lactide-co-ε-caprolactone (PLC) copolymers are evaluated as candidate materials to fabricate a small diameter graft. Using these materials, tubular prostheses of 4 mm inner diameter are fabricated by dip-coating. In vitro static and dynamic compliance tests are conducted, using custom-built apparatus featuring a closed flow system with water at 37 °C. Grafts of PLC monomer ratio of 50:50 are the most compliant (1.56% ± 0.31∙mm Hg-2 ), close to that of porcine aortic branch arteries (1.56% ± 0.43∙mm Hg-2 ), but underwent high continuous dilatation (87 µm min-1 ). Better matching is achieved by optimizing the thickness of a tubular conduit made from 70:30 PLC grafts. In vivo implantation and function of a PLC 70:30 conduit of 150 µm wall-thickness (WT) are tested as a rabbit aorta bypass. An implanted 150 µm WT PLC 70:30 prosthesis is observed over 3 h. The recorded angiogram shows continuous blood flow, no aneurysmal dilatation, leaks, or acute thrombosis during the in vivo test, indicating the potential for clinical applications.
Keyphrases
- blood flow
- optic nerve
- optical coherence tomography
- aortic valve
- aortic dissection
- pulmonary artery
- liver failure
- high glucose
- left ventricular
- fluorescent probe
- respiratory failure
- pulmonary hypertension
- mass spectrometry
- heart failure
- intensive care unit
- atrial fibrillation
- risk assessment
- endothelial cells
- tissue engineering
- aqueous solution
- molecularly imprinted