Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement

Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) is the leading cause of aortic valve disease in the world. Surgery to repair or replace the diseased valves is the only means to save a patient's life once the disease becomes symptomatic. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has revolutionised the treatment of...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Park, Kenneth Stuart
Other Authors: Bezuidenhout, Deon
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Biomedical Engineering 2018
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613335704305664
access_status_str Open Access
author Park, Kenneth Stuart
author2 Bezuidenhout, Deon
author_browse Bezuidenhout, Deon
Park, Kenneth Stuart
author_facet Bezuidenhout, Deon
Park, Kenneth Stuart
author_sort Park, Kenneth Stuart
collection Thesis
description Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) is the leading cause of aortic valve disease in the world. Surgery to repair or replace the diseased valves is the only means to save a patient's life once the disease becomes symptomatic. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has revolutionised the treatment of age-related degenerative aortic valve disease, but is currently not suitable for the majority of RHD sufferers due to the rapid degeneration of flexible leaflet valves in younger patients, contraindications of commercial devices to regurgitant or non-calcific aortic valve disease, and also due to resource or funding limitations. The current research project aimed to develop and test novel compressible balloon-expandable stents suitable for patients with symptomatic rheumatic aortic valve disease, and which would allow for a percutaneous polymeric valve to be manufactured, be crimped onto balloon-based devices, and be expanded into a compliant or non-calcific native aortic valve. Several stent concepts were developed and evaluated using Finite Element Analysis (FEA) and two favoured concepts were selected for more complex FEA, in which the balloon was simulated using an Ogden material model, and rigorous testing. The stent material, a nickel-cobalt-chromium alloy, was modelled as an isotropic elasto-plastic material with isotropic hardening. The novel stent designs incorporated a native leaflet-mimicking crown shape for continuous leaflet attachment and mechanisms to anchor the stented valve within compliant aortic roots. The first of the favoured designs provided tactile location during delivery and anchored using self-expanding arms on a balloon-expandable frame of the same material ("self-locating stents"). The second design anchored using arms that protruded during deployment as a consequence of plastic deformation incurred during crimping ("expanding arm stents"). Prototypes were successfully manufactured through laser cutting and electropolishing and showed good surface quality. In vitro testing included determination of crimping and expansion behaviour and measurement of mechanical properties such as resistance to migration in the anatomy. Valve performance was evaluated through in vitro haemodynamics in a pulse duplicator and durability was tested in a high-cycle fatigue tester. Simulated use testing was performed using cadaveric animal hearts. Finally, valves were also implanted into the aortic valve position of pigs (in acute termination experiments) through a transapical approach in order to verify valve deployment behaviour and function in vivo, and determine the stent's ability to anchor in the native anatomy. Stents could be crimped to diameters below 6mm and deployed using commercial balloons and proprietary non-occlusive deployment devices. FEA simulations of stent crimping and deployment matched experimental behaviour well and provide a tool to optimise stent performance. Peak Von Mises stresses during deployment (1437 MPa and 1633 MPa for self-locating and expanding arm stents, respectively) were comparable to a "zig-zag" stent simulated for control purposes (1650 MPa). Radial strength, evaluated for expanding arm stents, was lower than the Control stent (116 N vs. 347 N). This design, although predicted to be safe under fatigue loading, had a lower fatigue safety factor than the Control stent. Stents resisted migration to forces of at least 22 N, which is four times greater than physiological loading on the valves. Polymeric valves incorporating the stents were constructed and demonstrated good in vitro haemodynamic performance (Effective Orifice Areas ≥2.0cm², ΔP<9 mmHg, regurgitation <6%) and durability of over 400 million cycles. Designs functioned as intended in simulated use tests. Valves constructed using self-locating stents could be successfully deployed without rapid pacing in eight of nine pigs, and valve position was correct in seven of these. Valves of expanding arm stents remained anchored in six of eight attempted implants in pigs. This study has demonstrated proof of concept for a novel balloon-expandable stent for a polymeric transcatheter heart valve that is capable of anchoring in a compliant native aortic valve.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/27372
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:28.941Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher Division of Biomedical Engineering
publisherStr Division of Biomedical Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/27372 Stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement Park, Kenneth Stuart Bezuidenhout, Deon Appa, Harish Scherman, Jacques Biomedical Engineering Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) is the leading cause of aortic valve disease in the world. Surgery to repair or replace the diseased valves is the only means to save a patient's life once the disease becomes symptomatic. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has revolutionised the treatment of age-related degenerative aortic valve disease, but is currently not suitable for the majority of RHD sufferers due to the rapid degeneration of flexible leaflet valves in younger patients, contraindications of commercial devices to regurgitant or non-calcific aortic valve disease, and also due to resource or funding limitations. The current research project aimed to develop and test novel compressible balloon-expandable stents suitable for patients with symptomatic rheumatic aortic valve disease, and which would allow for a percutaneous polymeric valve to be manufactured, be crimped onto balloon-based devices, and be expanded into a compliant or non-calcific native aortic valve. Several stent concepts were developed and evaluated using Finite Element Analysis (FEA) and two favoured concepts were selected for more complex FEA, in which the balloon was simulated using an Ogden material model, and rigorous testing. The stent material, a nickel-cobalt-chromium alloy, was modelled as an isotropic elasto-plastic material with isotropic hardening. The novel stent designs incorporated a native leaflet-mimicking crown shape for continuous leaflet attachment and mechanisms to anchor the stented valve within compliant aortic roots. The first of the favoured designs provided tactile location during delivery and anchored using self-expanding arms on a balloon-expandable frame of the same material ("self-locating stents"). The second design anchored using arms that protruded during deployment as a consequence of plastic deformation incurred during crimping ("expanding arm stents"). Prototypes were successfully manufactured through laser cutting and electropolishing and showed good surface quality. In vitro testing included determination of crimping and expansion behaviour and measurement of mechanical properties such as resistance to migration in the anatomy. Valve performance was evaluated through in vitro haemodynamics in a pulse duplicator and durability was tested in a high-cycle fatigue tester. Simulated use testing was performed using cadaveric animal hearts. Finally, valves were also implanted into the aortic valve position of pigs (in acute termination experiments) through a transapical approach in order to verify valve deployment behaviour and function in vivo, and determine the stent's ability to anchor in the native anatomy. Stents could be crimped to diameters below 6mm and deployed using commercial balloons and proprietary non-occlusive deployment devices. FEA simulations of stent crimping and deployment matched experimental behaviour well and provide a tool to optimise stent performance. Peak Von Mises stresses during deployment (1437 MPa and 1633 MPa for self-locating and expanding arm stents, respectively) were comparable to a "zig-zag" stent simulated for control purposes (1650 MPa). Radial strength, evaluated for expanding arm stents, was lower than the Control stent (116 N vs. 347 N). This design, although predicted to be safe under fatigue loading, had a lower fatigue safety factor than the Control stent. Stents resisted migration to forces of at least 22 N, which is four times greater than physiological loading on the valves. Polymeric valves incorporating the stents were constructed and demonstrated good in vitro haemodynamic performance (Effective Orifice Areas ≥2.0cm², ΔP<9 mmHg, regurgitation <6%) and durability of over 400 million cycles. Designs functioned as intended in simulated use tests. Valves constructed using self-locating stents could be successfully deployed without rapid pacing in eight of nine pigs, and valve position was correct in seven of these. Valves of expanding arm stents remained anchored in six of eight attempted implants in pigs. This study has demonstrated proof of concept for a novel balloon-expandable stent for a polymeric transcatheter heart valve that is capable of anchoring in a compliant native aortic valve. 2018-02-07T09:08:45Z 2018-02-07T09:08:45Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Med) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27372 eng application/pdf Division of Biomedical Engineering Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Biomedical Engineering
Park, Kenneth Stuart
Stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement
title_full Stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement
title_fullStr Stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement
title_full_unstemmed Stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement
title_short Stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement
title_sort stents for transcatheter aortic valve replacement
topic Biomedical Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27372
work_keys_str_mv AT parkkennethstuart stentsfortranscatheteraorticvalvereplacement