A Cost-Effective Mock Circulatory System for Initial Testing of Cardiovascular Devices

Author(s):  
Ranjitha Rebecca Jeevan ◽  
T. Rebecca Nancy ◽  
Bhaskar Mohan Murari
Author(s):  
Francesco Maria Colacino ◽  
Maurizio Arabia ◽  
Gionata Fragomeni

In the last decades cardiovascular diseases greatly increased worldwide, and bioengineering provided new technologies and cardiovascular prostheses to medical doctors and surgeons. The design of active and passive devices aroused notable interests becoming more and more challenging as well as crucial. In this framework, it is important to faithfully reproduce the interaction between the prostheses and the cardiovascular system when in-vitro experiments are performed. For this reason, a new and improved kind of test benches becomes necessary. Purely hydraulic mock circulatory systems showed low flexibility to allow tests of different cardiovascular devices and low precision when a reference mathematical model must be reproduced. In this chapter a new bench is described. It combines the computer model of the cardiovascular system and its real-time interaction with the device to be tested. The solution adopted can be exploited in a Grid environment to allow remote experimentation.


1997 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Mabuchi ◽  
T. Chinzei ◽  
Y. Abe ◽  
K. Imanishi ◽  
T. Isoyama ◽  
...  

An electrochemical sensor system to allow real-time measurement and feedback of catecholamine concentrations was developed for use in the control of artificial hearts. Electrochemical analyses were carried out using a carbon fiber working electrode, an Ag-AgCI reference electrode, and a potentiostat. The operating parameters of the pneumatically-driven artificial heart system were altered in accordance with the algorithm for changes in the catecholamine concentration. The minimum detectable concentrations of both adrenaline and noradrenaline in a mock circulatory system using a phosphate-buffered solution were approximately 1-2 ng/ml (10-8 mol/L). An artificial heart control system utilizing this set-up performed satisfactorily without delay, although sensor sensitivity decreased when placed in goat plasma instead of a phosphate-buffered solution, due to the adsorption of various substances such as plasma proteins onto the electrodes. This study demonstrated the future feasibility of a feedback control system for artificial hearts using catecholamine concentrations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 408-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Te-I Chang ◽  
Kang-Hong Hsu ◽  
Chi-Wen Luo ◽  
Jen-Hong Yen ◽  
Po-Chien Lu ◽  
...  

Abstract OBJECTIVES Handmade trileaflet expanded polytetrafluoroethylene valved conduit developed using the flip-over method has been tailored for pulmonary valve reconstruction with satisfactory outcomes. We investigated the in vitro performance of the valve design in a mock circulatory system with various conduit sizes. In our study, the design was transformed into a transcatheter stent graft system which could fit in original valved conduits in a valve-in-valve fashion. METHODS Five different sizes of valved polytetrafluoroethylene vascular grafts (16, 18, 20, 22 and 24 mm) were mounted onto a mock circulatory system with a prism window for direct leaflets motion observation. Transvalvular pressure gradients were recorded using pressure transducers. Mean and instant flows were determined via a rotameter and a flowmeter. Similar flip-over trileaflet valve design was then carried out in 3 available stent graft sizes (23, 26 and 28.5 mm, Gore aortic extender), which were deployed inside the valved conduits. RESULTS Peak pressure gradient across 5 different sized graft valves, in their appropriate flow setting (2.0, 2.5 and 5.0 l/min), ranged from 4.7 to 13.2 mmHg. No significant valve regurgitation was noted (regurgitant fraction: 1.6–4.9%) in all valve sizes and combinations. Three sizes of the trileaflet-valved stent grafts were implanted in the 4 sizes of valved conduits except for the 16-mm conduit. Peak pressure gradient increase after valved-stent graft-in-valved-conduit setting was <10 mmHg in all 4 conduits. CONCLUSIONS The study showed excellent in vitro performance of trileaflet polytetrafluoroethylene valved conduits. Its valved stent graft transformation provided data which may serve as a reference for transcatheter valve-in-valve research in the future.


1977 ◽  
Vol 99 (4) ◽  
pp. 184-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. M. High ◽  
J. A. Brighton ◽  
A. D. Brickman ◽  
W. S. Pierce

A mathematical model is developed for calculating the pressures and flows in an artificial heart, its pneumatic drive unit, and a mock circulatory system. The system is divided into convenient subsystems to facilitate the analysis, and each subsystem is then analyzed separately. The set of independent equations developed is solved on a computer and corresponding experimental tests are made on the actual system. A comparison of the experimental and computer results shows good agreement for the mean flow rate through the pump and also for several instantaneous pressures and flow rates in the system.


Author(s):  
Giovanni Biglino ◽  
Silvia Schievano ◽  
Catriona Baker ◽  
Alessandro Giardini ◽  
Richard Figliola ◽  
...  

The Stage I of Fontan palliation for neonates with hypoplastic left heart syndrome, namely the Norwood procedure, aims to improve the flow of oxygenated blood in the systemic circulation while at the same time providing blood flow to the pulmonary circulation1. This surgical operation usually involves enlargement of the hypoplastic aorta by means of a patch, reconstruction of aortic coarctation and increase pulmonary flow. The latter point, at present, is achieved in three different ways: i) a Blalock-Taussig (BT) shunt from the innominate artery to the pulmonary artery, ii) an atrio-pulmonary shunt, referred to as Sano modification2 and iii) stenting the ductus arteriosus and banding the pulmonary arteries, referred to as “hybrid” Norwood3. In general, it is clear that the circulation following the Norwood procedure presents a very specific and complex arrangement.


2016 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. S328-S329
Author(s):  
G.M. Christensen ◽  
B.D. King ◽  
B.B. Reid ◽  
S. Stoker ◽  
R. Alharethi ◽  
...  

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