Clinical & Experimental Cardiology

Clinical & Experimental Cardiology
Open Access

ISSN: 2155-9880

+44 1300 500008

New expandable polyurethane stent valve for transcatheter implantation in children with heart valve disease; results of physical, hydrodynamic and experimental tests


20th European Cardiology Conference

October 16-18, 2017 | Budapest, Hungary

Miguel A Maluf, Mariana G Massei, Rogerio Orbetelli, Miko Obradovic, Christian Bader, Christoph Klaus, Evandro Drigo, Mauricio R Vaz, Andr�© Gimenes, Fernando Zanoni, Caio Sabino, Jayme Ortiz and Ovandir Bazan

Federal University of S�£o Paulo, Brazil

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Clin Exp Cardiolog

Abstract :

Introduction: Transcatheter valves manufactured using biological tissue, as the essential structural component, can be induced to: mechanical degradation after crimping and early calcification in pediatric patients. Objectives: Manufacture and successful tests of one expandable polyurethane stent valve, may reduce the repeated operations of valve replacement, during the growing children. Materials & Methods: I-Physical testing. Prostheses were submitted to universal testing in machine EMIC and a computer with Tesc software, able to generate graphs of force versus deformation (stretching) II-Hydrodynamic testing. Prostheses with diameters from 12 to 22 mm, were submitted to pulsatile physiological flow and stress conditions. III-Experimental implants in sheep.Ten sheep was submitted to prosthesis implant, by trans catheter technique in pulmonary position. In Group A: Four sheep w/ <20 kg, the stent was expanded up to 18mm and in Group B: Six sheep w/ > 20 kg, expanded up to 22mm. Results: Physical and Hydrodynamic testing of Polyurethane strip removal of stent valve, before and after undergoing to 30 minutes crimping, showed preservation of properties of resistance and elasticity elongation. In vitro durability was proven for >15 years. Eight sheep, were submited to 3D echo study, performed in the 6th month of follow-up, showed: there was no significant transvalvular gradients and trivial regurgitation in 3 cases. Histologic, radiologic and electron microscopic study of the first prosthesis shows: integrity of structure and free of calcification. Seven survival sheep are well, after 15th months of follow-up. Conclusion: Expandable polyurethane stent valve, with special design for implant and expansion in growing children, has experimental satisfactory hemodynamic performance and durability in vitro and in vivo tests. Calcification and structural changes were not observed. In the next step, clinical studies are be planned.

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