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Development of a tissue-regenerative vascular graft: Structural and Mechanical Aspects

In attempt to prevent graft failure, the tissue-regeneration field offered the porous vascular scaffolds as promising solution for the lack of endothelialization seen in the small-calibre synthetic vascular graft. Another cause of graft failure was reported to be the mechanical mismatch between the...

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Main Author: Sirry, Mazin Salaheldin
Other Authors: Franz, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Human Biology 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sirry, Mazin Salaheldin
author2 Franz, Thomas
author_browse Franz, Thomas
Sirry, Mazin Salaheldin
author_facet Franz, Thomas
Sirry, Mazin Salaheldin
author_sort Sirry, Mazin Salaheldin
collection Thesis
description In attempt to prevent graft failure, the tissue-regeneration field offered the porous vascular scaffolds as promising solution for the lack of endothelialization seen in the small-calibre synthetic vascular graft. Another cause of graft failure was reported to be the mechanical mismatch between the graft and the host vessel. This study concerned the investigation and optimization of structural designs of tissue-regenerative vascular grafts, comprising ingrowth permissible porous polyurethane (PPU) foam and knitted reinforcement wire mesh, with the aim of providing vascular prostheses that mimic arterial mechanics. A 3D geometry of a knitted eight-loop wire mesh was imported into Abaqus CAE® 6.8-2 and assembled with a PPU tube geometry such that the wire mesh acted as external reinforcement (EX) or embedded reinforcement (EM) to the PPU tube. A 45°-section assembly was meshed using 8-node linear brick elements. Nitinol (NITI) and polyurethane (PU) material models were used for the knitted mesh. Material parameters obtained in experimental tests were implemented in hyperfoam (PPU), shape memory alloy (NITI) and linear elastic (PU) constitutive models. The luminal grafts surfaces were subjected to uniformly distributed pressure load ramping from 0 to 200mmHg. Models were compared in terms of predicted maximum stress and strain, wall compression, strain energy, radial displacement and compliance. The predicted radial compliance ranged between 1.2 and 15.6%/100mmHg in the reinforced grafts, compared to 106.4 and 65.1%/100mmHg for the non-reinforced grafts. The maximum stress in the Nitinol remained safe at 33 % of stress associated with start of austenite-martensite phase transformation (i.e. 483MPa). The maximum stress and strain values detected in the PPU tube indicated recoverable elastic deformation. The reinforcement enhanced the mechanical performance of the graft without affecting its tissue-regenerating characteristics, as the predicted maximum wall compression indicated that the reduction in size of pore windows would still allow ingrowth of capillaries and arterioles.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:38.662Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher Department of Human Biology
publisherStr Department of Human Biology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/3202 Development of a tissue-regenerative vascular graft: Structural and Mechanical Aspects Sirry, Mazin Salaheldin Franz, Thomas Medicine In attempt to prevent graft failure, the tissue-regeneration field offered the porous vascular scaffolds as promising solution for the lack of endothelialization seen in the small-calibre synthetic vascular graft. Another cause of graft failure was reported to be the mechanical mismatch between the graft and the host vessel. This study concerned the investigation and optimization of structural designs of tissue-regenerative vascular grafts, comprising ingrowth permissible porous polyurethane (PPU) foam and knitted reinforcement wire mesh, with the aim of providing vascular prostheses that mimic arterial mechanics. A 3D geometry of a knitted eight-loop wire mesh was imported into Abaqus CAE® 6.8-2 and assembled with a PPU tube geometry such that the wire mesh acted as external reinforcement (EX) or embedded reinforcement (EM) to the PPU tube. A 45°-section assembly was meshed using 8-node linear brick elements. Nitinol (NITI) and polyurethane (PU) material models were used for the knitted mesh. Material parameters obtained in experimental tests were implemented in hyperfoam (PPU), shape memory alloy (NITI) and linear elastic (PU) constitutive models. The luminal grafts surfaces were subjected to uniformly distributed pressure load ramping from 0 to 200mmHg. Models were compared in terms of predicted maximum stress and strain, wall compression, strain energy, radial displacement and compliance. The predicted radial compliance ranged between 1.2 and 15.6%/100mmHg in the reinforced grafts, compared to 106.4 and 65.1%/100mmHg for the non-reinforced grafts. The maximum stress in the Nitinol remained safe at 33 % of stress associated with start of austenite-martensite phase transformation (i.e. 483MPa). The maximum stress and strain values detected in the PPU tube indicated recoverable elastic deformation. The reinforcement enhanced the mechanical performance of the graft without affecting its tissue-regenerating characteristics, as the predicted maximum wall compression indicated that the reduction in size of pore windows would still allow ingrowth of capillaries and arterioles. 2014-07-28T18:15:26Z 2014-07-28T18:15:26Z 2010 Master Thesis Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/3202 eng application/pdf Department of Human Biology Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Medicine
Sirry, Mazin Salaheldin
Development of a tissue-regenerative vascular graft: Structural and Mechanical Aspects
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Development of a tissue-regenerative vascular graft: Structural and Mechanical Aspects
title_full Development of a tissue-regenerative vascular graft: Structural and Mechanical Aspects
title_fullStr Development of a tissue-regenerative vascular graft: Structural and Mechanical Aspects
title_full_unstemmed Development of a tissue-regenerative vascular graft: Structural and Mechanical Aspects
title_short Development of a tissue-regenerative vascular graft: Structural and Mechanical Aspects
title_sort development of a tissue regenerative vascular graft structural and mechanical aspects
topic Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/3202
work_keys_str_mv AT sirrymazinsalaheldin developmentofatissueregenerativevasculargraftstructuralandmechanicalaspects