scholarly journals DEVELOPMENT OF A BLOOD ANALOG FOR THE HEMODYNAMIC EFFICIENCY EVALUATION OF CARDIOVASCULAR DEVICES

Author(s):  
T. T. Nguyen ◽  
R. Mongrain ◽  
S. Prakash ◽  
J. -C. Tardif

Accurate simulation of blood hemolytic potential (i.e. the destruction of red blood cells) would be a valuable tool to evaluate blood-interacting devices. Indeed, such a model would alleviate several practical problems with manipulating real blood (addition of anticoagulants and antibiotics, filtration, etc.). In the present study, we have developed a blood analog which is a suspension of micron-sized natural polymeric gel particles, each encapsulating a dye agent. These particles release the dye agent through shear-induced diffusion and fragmentation from exposure to high, non-physiological shear rates. A controlled shear field was applied to blood analog samples using a custom-made grooved parallel plate geometry device as previously reported in the literature. The device was designed to apply a shear stress and shear exposure duration in the range of 0.15 – 269.18 Pa and 156 - 1297 ms, respectively. From the results obtained, a correlation between the human index of hemolysis and the concentration of the released dye agent can be found. Therefore, the use of the proposed suspensions appears suitable as a blood analog for the in vitro evaluation of the destructive effects of cardiovascular devices.

Lab on a Chip ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
YUHAO QIANG ◽  
Jia Liu ◽  
Ming Dao ◽  
E Du

Red blood cells (RBCs) are subjected to recurrent changes in shear stress and oxygen tension during blood circulation. The cyclic shear stress has been identified as an important factor that...


Author(s):  
Yertay Mendygarin ◽  
Luis R. Rojas-Solórzano ◽  
Nurassyl Kussaiyn ◽  
Rakhim Supiyev ◽  
Mansur Zhussupbekov

Cardiovascular Diseases, the common name for various Heart Diseases, are responsible for nearly 17.3 million deaths annually and remain the leading global cause of death in the world. It is estimated that this number will grow to more than 23.6 million by 2030, with almost 80% of all cases taking place in low and middle income countries. Surgical treatment of these diseases involves the use of blood-wetted devices, whose relatively recent development has given rise to numerous possibilities for design improvements. However, blood can be damaged when flowing through these devices due to the lack of biocompatibility of surrounding walls, thermal and osmotic effects and most prominently, due to the excessive exposure of blood cells to shear stress for prolonged periods of time. This extended exposure may lead to a rupture of membrane of red blood cells, resulting in a release of hemoglobin into the blood plasma, in a process called hemolysis. Moreover, exposure of platelets to high shear stresses can increase the likelihood of thrombosis. Therefore, regions of high shear stress and residence time of blood cells must be considered thoroughly during the design of blood-contacting devices. Though laboratory tests are vital for design improvements, in-vitro experiments have proven to be costly, time-intensive and ethically controversial. On the other hand, simulating blood behavior using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is considered to be an inexpensive and promising tool to help predicting blood damage in complex flows. Nevertheless, current state-of-the-art CFD models of blood flow to predict hemolysis are still far from being fully reliable and accurate for design purposes. Previous work have demonstrated that prediction of hemolysis can be dramatically improved when using a multiphase (i.e., phases are plasma, red blood cells and platelets) model of the blood instead of assuming the blood as a homogeneous mixture. Nonetheless, the accurate determination of how the cells segregate becomes the critical issue in reaching a truthful prediction of blood damage. Therefore, the attempt of this study is to develop and validate a numerical model based on Granular Kinetic Theory (GKT) for solid phases (i.e., cells treated as particles) that provides an improved prediction of blood cells segregation within the flow in a microtube. Simulations were based on finite volume method using Eulerian-Eulerian modeling for treatment of three-phase (liquid-red blood cells and platelets) flow including the GKT to deal with viscous properties of the solid phases. GKT proved to be a good model to predict particle concentration and pressure drop by taking into account the contribution of collisional, kinetic and frictional effects in the stress tensor of the segregated solid phases. Preliminary results show that the improved segregated model leads to a better prediction of spatial distribution of blood cells. Simulations were performed using ANSYS FLUENT platform.


Author(s):  
M. Salinas ◽  
D. Schmidt ◽  
R. Lange ◽  
M. Libera ◽  
S. Ramaswamy

There is extensive documented evidence that mechanical conditioning plays a significant role in the development of tissue grown in-vitro for heart valve scaffolds [1–3]. Modern custom made bioreactors have been used to study the mechanobiology of engineered heart valve tissues [1]. Specifically fluid-induced shears stress patterns may play a critical role in up-regulating extracellular matrix secretion by progenitor cell sources such as bone marrow derived stem cells (BMSCs) [2] and increasing the possibility of cell differentiation towards a heart valve phenotype. We hypothesize that specific biomimetic fluid induced shear stress environments, particularly oscillatory shear stress (OSS), have significant effects on BMSCs phenotype and formation rates. As a first step here, we attempt to quantify and delineate the entire 3-D flow field by developing a CFD model to predict the fluid induced shear stress environments on engineered heart valves tissue under quasi-static steady flow and dynamic steady flow conditions.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 516-516
Author(s):  
Roberta Donadelli ◽  
Jennifer N. Orje ◽  
Miriam Galbusera ◽  
Giuseppe Remuzzi ◽  
Zaverio M. Ruggeri

Abstract ADAMTS-13 is a metalloproteinase that cleaves von Willebrand factor (VWF) at the peptide bond Tyr842-Met843 within the A2 domain of the mature subunit, thus contributing to the regulation of multimers size in the circulation. Cleavage is effective on newly released VWF bound to the surface of endothelial cells, but the extent to which the protease acts on circulating VWF or limits the adhesive properties of multimers during thrombus formation remains unclear. To begin to address these questions, we have established a real-time videomicroscopy technique to visualize the formation of platelet aggregates mediated by the binding of VWF A1 domain to the platelet membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ibα. In this process, single platelets first adhere to surface-immobilized VWF, and then bind soluble VWF from plasma and aggregate through a mechanism dependent on shear rate above a critical threshold. Platelet aggregates formed promptly when whole human blood containing the thrombin inhibitor D-phenyl alanyl-L-prolyl-L-arginine chloromethyl ketone dihydrochloride as an anticoagulant (80 μM) was perfused over immobilized VWF at wall shear rates above 10,000 s−1. The size of aggregates increased during the first 5 min of perfusion, then started to decrease and was less than 30% of maximum after 10 min of perfusion. When the metal ion chelator, EDTA (5mM), was added to the blood before perfusion, the size of aggregates was larger than in control blood and showed no decrease over a 10 min period. A similar result was obtained when plasma was removed and washed blood cells were suspended in a buffer containing 20 μg/ml purified VWF multimers, suggesting that a metal ion dependent plasma protease was responsible for the time-dependent reduction of platelet aggregate size. To evaluate this hypothesis, recombinant human ADAMTS-13 purified from the culture medium of stably transfected D. melanogaster cells was added to washed blood cells resuspended in buffer/VWF, and the suspension was perfused over immobilized VWF at shear rates above 10,000 s−1. In this case, VWF-mediated thrombi started to form but began to dissipate within 3 min. After 6 min, the size of thrombi was 30% or less of that seen in the absence of ADAMTS-13. When the latter was added to washed blood cells resuspended in buffer/VWF after 5 min of perfusion, when platelet aggregates had reached their maximum dimensions, a reduction in size to 30% or less of maximum occurred within 5 min. Pre-incubation of ADAMTS-13 with the blood cell/VWF suspension before perfusion did not accelerate or enhance the reduction of platelet aggregate size, indicating that the enzyme likely acts only under flow conditions and/or after VWF multimers are bound to platelet GP Ibα and exposed to shear stress. ADAMTS-13 also had no significant effect on the size of platelet thrombi formed onto collagen type I fibrils at shear rates as high as 6,000 s−1. These findings suggest that ADAMTS-13 provides a selective mechanism to regulate the size of platelet thrombi, but the effect may be limited to conditions under which the cohesion between platelets depends mainly on VWF binding induced by pathologically elevated shear stress.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 196-196
Author(s):  
Jane F Arthur ◽  
Isaac Pinar ◽  
Adam Facey ◽  
Andreas Fouras ◽  
Kris Ryan ◽  
...  

Abstract Platelets respond rapidly to injury, infection and changes in blood shear stress where they engage subendothelial collagen and von Willebrand Factor via platelet-specific receptors glycoprotein (GP)VI and the GPIb-IX-V complex, respectively. Metalloproteolytic shedding of GPVI is one important consequence of platelet activation and occurs via activation of the receptor sheddase A Disintegrin and Metalloproteinase (ADAM)10. We demonstrated that exposure of platelets to brief, elevated shear was sufficient to activate ADAM10-mediated shedding of GPVI and that this activation did not require platelet receptor engagement, intracellular signalling or release of soluble mediators (Al Tamimi et al., Blood, 2012). A critical global question, however, is how ADAM10 activity towards vascular substrates can be so rapidly upregulated in a high shear environment? To directly examine shear-induced activation of a vascular metalloproteinase, we developed the first sensor capable of visualising ADAM10 activity on a forming thrombus, consisting of a GPVI sequence-based ADAM10-sensitive fluorescent peptide with an ADAM10-releasable quencher (GPVI-Cy3). Rapid recombinant (r) ADAM10 (Km = 24.3 μM, kcat = 0.27 s-1) but not rADAM17 cleavage of GPVI-Cy3 permitted direct ADAM10 monitoring on platelets. First, suspensions of human washed platelets were exposed to variable rates of uniform shear in a cone-plate viscometer, or were treated with 10 μg/ml collagen-related peptide (CRP; a GPVI ligand), or 5 mM NEM (a potent generic activator of ADAMs) then mixed with 5-10 μM GPVI-Cy3. Real-time fluorescence was monitored in a fluorescence plate reader. Untreated platelets displayed basal (37% of maximal) levels of ADAM10 activity (2.3 pmol/min/106 platelets; 100% denoting NEM-induced levels) consistent with active ADAM10, lacking an inhibitory pro-domain by western blot and flow cytometry, being present on the non-activated platelet surface. ADAM10 activity increased to 59% of maximal activity following CRP treatment and 86% of maximal activity after exposure to 10,000 s-1 shear stress for 5 min (5.4 pmol/min/106 platelets). Cleavage of GPVI-Cy3 was completely blocked by inclusion of 100 μM GM6001 or 2 μM GI254023 (specific ADAM10 inhibitor). Second, ADAM10 activity was visualised using fluorescence multi-channel confocal imaging (Nikon A1R Plus si, Piezo z-stage and perfect focus system) of thrombi formed by perfusion of collagen-coated capillaries with hirudinated whole blood (input wall shear rate = 1,800 s-1). The channel profile was reconstructed digitally, and a Computational Fluid Dynamics package (OPEN-Foam) accurately simulated the shear forces acting on the flow throughout the domain as a function of time. Importantly, this technique permits shear rates to be precisely determined at the thrombi surface, and provides time-varying data on shear rates experienced by platelets traversing the domain in vitro. Highest ADAM10 activity was observed 5-10 minutes post thrombus formation and colocalized with areas of high (>6000 s-1) shear on the surface of the thrombus. When GPVI-Cy3 was included for the duration of thrombus formation, serial z-stack thrombus cross section images revealed areas of high and low ADAM10 activity within the thrombus core, consistent with elevated ADAM10 activity on platelets involved in the initial stages of thrombus formation. Together, our findings (i) define a novel ADAM10-selective substrate GPVI-Cy3 which reports on ADAM10 activity in vitro and under hydrodynamic flow ex vivo, (ii) enable simultaneous quantitation of ADAM10 activity and local shear rates, and (iii) demonstrate correlation between ADAM10 activity and regions of elevated shear stress for the first time. Future studies will investigate how shear stress under pulsatile or continuous flow activates ADAM10 on vascular cell membranes, ultimately enabling the design of therapeutic agents that discretely target shear-mediated up-regulation of ADAMs activity. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4155-4155
Author(s):  
Margo Renee Rollins ◽  
Byungwook Ahn ◽  
Yumiko Sakurai ◽  
Jordan C Ciciliano ◽  
Wilbur A Lam

Abstract Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) is an inherited disorder of the β-globin chain of hemoglobin, in which a single point mutation leads to decreased deformability of red blood cells (RBCs) and increased cellular adhesion to endothelium. The effect of this mutation on RBCs has been well characterized, and the interplay of endothelial cells, RBCs, and white blood cells (WBCs) have also been well characterized. However, few studies have specifically investigated how platelets interact with endothelial cells and other blood cells in the context of SCD and the role these cell fragments may have in vaso-occlusion. To that end, we utilized microfluidic technology previously developed in our lab to perform a “real time” in vitro analyses of platelet-endothelial cell interactions in SCD patient samples. This “microvasculature-on-a-chip” enables the visualization of blood cell-endothelial cell interactions under a controlled hemodynamic environment (Tsai et al, JCI, 2012). As shear stress can trigger platelet activation, we further modified and optimized our standard microfluidic devices to encompass 3 different physiologic shear rates. Our device features microchannels 50µm in diameter with human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) confluently lining the channels; there are 12 channels in each device, grouped in 3 sets of 4 channels with graduating shear rates spanning 3 orders of magnitude (Figure 1). Our initial experiments were performed under normoxic conditions allowing characterization of platelet-endothelial interactions in an “arterial” in vitro environment. Whole blood samples were obtained from 3 patient populations: patients with HgbSS SCD on hydroxyurea (HgbSS+HU), patients with HgbSS SCD not on hydroxyurea (HgbSS-no HU), and normal healthy controls. Over 30 minutes, whole blood stained with fluorescently labeled CD41 to identify platelets and Hoeschst to identify HUVEC nuclei was perfused at a rate of 1.5µl/minute under videomicroscopy. Accumulation of platelets on the endothelialized channels and platelet aggregates were quantified based on anti-CD41 fluorescence. Within 1 minute of perfusion, HgbSS-no HU whole blood samples exhibited extensive platelet aggregates at 1 and 10 dyne/cm2 (Figure 2); this phenomenon did not occur under any of the shear conditions in blood samples from Hgb SS+HU or healthy control samples. In HgbSS-no HU blood samples, some of these “thrombi”-like aggregates were stable under flow, increased in size, and persisted for the remainder of the 30 minute experiments. In contrast, mild, uniform, platelet adhesion slowly developed at high shear conditions in Hgb SS+HU with fewer platelet aggregates forming as compared to patients with HgbSS- no HU. Healthy control samples did not exhibit this platelet aggregation. There appears to be an attenuating effect of hydroxyurea on platelets that prevents platelet clumping from occuring as frequently under various shear conditions that is not present in the Hgb SS-no HU samples (Figure 3). In conclusion, using our novel in vitro system, we have demonstrated the platelets from Hgb SS-no HU patients have a significantly increased propensity to adhere, aggregate, and accumulate in endothelialized microvasculature-sized microchannels. Interestingly, this effect appears to be attenuated in blood samples from Hgb SS+HU patients and not present in healthy controls, demonstrating that hydroxyurea appears to be an important modifier of this phenomenon. Experiments investigating the underlying mechanisms of this phenomenon, the effects of deoxygenation and the potential role of platelets in vaso-occlusion, the effects of sickle cell platelet adhesion/aggregation on endothelial function, and how hydroxyurea may or may not affect any or all of these parameters, are all currently ongoing. Figure 1 Figure 1. Figure 2 Figure 2. Figure 3 Figure 3. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (81) ◽  
pp. 20120900 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. J. Vaughan ◽  
M. G. Haugh ◽  
L. M. McNamara

Bone continuously adapts its internal structure to accommodate the functional demands of its mechanical environment and strain-induced flow of interstitial fluid is believed to be the primary mediator of mechanical stimuli to bone cells in vivo. In vitro investigations have shown that bone cells produce important biochemical signals in response to fluid flow applied using parallel-plate flow chamber (PPFC) systems. However, the exact mechanical stimulus experienced by the cells within these systems remains unclear. To fully understand this behaviour represents a most challenging multi-physics problem involving the interaction between deformable cellular structures and adjacent fluid flows. In this study, we use a fluid–structure interaction computational approach to investigate the nature of the mechanical stimulus being applied to a single osteoblast cell under fluid flow within a PPFC system. The analysis decouples the contribution of pressure and shear stress on cellular deformation and for the first time highlights that cell strain under flow is dominated by the pressure in the PPFC system rather than the applied shear stress. Furthermore, it was found that strains imparted on the cell membrane were relatively low whereas significant strain amplification occurred at the cell–substrate interface. These results suggest that strain transfer through focal attachments at the base of the cell are the primary mediators of mechanical signals to the cell under flow in a PPFC system. Such information is vital in order to correctly interpret biological responses of bone cells under in vitro stimulation and elucidate the mechanisms associated with mechanotransduction in vivo .


ASAIO Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian R. Sargent ◽  
Ina Laura Perkins ◽  
Venkateswarlu Kanamarlapudi ◽  
Christopher Moriarty ◽  
Sabrina Ali

2021 ◽  
pp. 039139882110035
Author(s):  
Xu Mei ◽  
Min Zhong ◽  
Wanning Ge ◽  
Liudi Zhang

Non-physiological shear stress in Ventricular Assist Device (VAD) is considered to be an important trigger of blood damage, which has become the biggest shackle for clinical application. The researches on blood damage in literature were limited to qualitative but did not make much quantitative analysis. The purpose of this study was to investigate the quantitative influence of two flow-dependent parameters: shear stress (rotational speed) and exposure time on the shear-induced damage of red blood cells and von Willebrand Factor (vWF). A vortex blood-shearing platform was constructed to conduct in vitro experiments. Free hemoglobin assay and vWF molecular weight analysis were then performed on the sheared blood samples. MATLAB was used for regression fitting of original experimental data. The quantitative correlations between the hemolysis index, the degradation of high molecular weight vWF and the two flow-dependent parameters were found both following the power law model. The mathematic models indicated that the sensitivity of blood damage on red blood cells and vWF to exposure time was both greater than that of shear stress. Besides, the damage of vWF was more serious than that of red blood cells at the same flow condition. The models could be used to predict blood damage in blood-contacting medical devices, especially for the slow even stagnant blood flow regions in VAD, thus may provide useful guidance for VAD development and improvement. It also indicated that the vortex platform can be used to study the law of blood damage for the simple structure and easy operation.


Author(s):  
BAKHRUSHINA ELENA O. ◽  
ANUROVA MARIA N. ◽  
ZAVALNIY MICHAEL S. ◽  
DEMINA NATALIA B. ◽  
BARDAKOV ALEXANDER I. ◽  
...  

Objective: The main objective of our study is the comprehensive analysis and characterization of the existing spreadability evaluation strategies, the comparison of the obtained results reproducibility and convergence through the example of the 9 most widely used dermatological gels. Methods: Dolobene®, Flucinar®, Ketorol®, Contractubex®, Dr. Theiss Venen gel®, Solcoseryl®, Deep Relief®, Hepatrombin® pharmacopoeia gel samples were analyzed using parallel-plate, “slip and drag”, and viscometry methods. Analysis was performed in flow mode at 32±0.2 °C, over shear rates ranging from 0 to 350 s−1, increasing over a period of 120 s, and was maintained at the superior limit for 10 s and then decreased during the same period. At least 5 replicates of each sample were evaluated, and the upward flow curves were fitted using the Casson mathematical model. Results: Solcoseryl® and Dolobene® showed the best spreadability in the parallel-plate method (3115.66±50.00 and 3316.63±50.00, respectively); Contractubex® and Dolobene showed the best spreadability in the “slip and drag” test (73.46±0.5 and 18.32±0.5, respectively); Solcoseryl® and Contractubex® showed the best spreadability in the viscometry test (43.86±0.5 and 76.92±0.5, respectively). Conclusion: This study analyzed the existing methods for determining the spreadability using commercially available samples of the dermatological gels as examples. The viscometric and the "Slip and drag" methods use different characteristics of spreadability, giving a complex evaluation of the measured parameter in vitro. Therefore, the combination of these two methods has the greatest prospects for reliable determination of this indicator.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document