ANISOTROPIC TRANSPORT THROUGH POLYMER LAYER AND POROUS ARTERIAL WALL WITH BINDING IN DRUG-ELUTING STENTS USING THE FEM

Author(s):  
fabiane aparecida dos santos frazzoli ◽  
Rachel Manhaes de Lucena ◽  
Norberto Mangiavacchi ◽  
José da Rocha Miranda Pontes ◽  
Gustavo Rabello dos Anjos ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
fabiane aparecida dos santos frazzoli ◽  
Haroldo Rosman Junior ◽  
Rachel Manhaes de Lucena ◽  
Norberto Mangiavacchi ◽  
José da Rocha Miranda Pontes ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Haroldo Rosman Junior ◽  
Rachel Manhaes de Lucena ◽  
Norberto Mangiavacchi ◽  
José da Rocha Miranda Pontes ◽  
Sean McGinty

Author(s):  
Norberto Mangiavacchi ◽  
José da Rocha Miranda Pontes ◽  
Gustavo Rabello dos Anjos ◽  
Sean McGinty ◽  
Rachel Manhaes de Lucena

Author(s):  
Franz Bozsak ◽  
Jean-Marc Chomaz ◽  
Abdul I. Barakat

Drugs used in drug-eluting stents (DES) to inhibit proliferation of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) also limit re-endothelialization at the site of stent implantation [1]. Thus, treated patients face an increased risk of late-stent thrombosis. Avoiding this adverse side effect represents one of the major challenges in the design of next-generation DES.


2006 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. S633
Author(s):  
R. Balossino ◽  
G. Dubini ◽  
R. Hose ◽  
P. Lawford ◽  
A. Narracott

2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoxiang Zhu ◽  
Richard D. Braatz

Increasing interests have been raised toward the potential applications of biodegradable poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) coatings for drug-eluting stents in order to improve the drug delivery and reduce adverse outcomes in stented arteries in patients. This article presents a mathematical model to describe the integrated processes of drug release in a stent with PLGA coating and subsequent drug delivery, distribution, and drug pharmacokinetics in the arterial wall. The integrated model takes into account the PLGA degradation and erosion, anisotropic drug diffusion in the arterial wall, and reversible drug binding. The model simulations first compare the drug delivery from a biodegradable PLGA coating with that from a biodurable coating, including the drug release profiles in the coating, average arterial drug levels, and arterial drug distribution. Using the model for the PLGA stent coating, the simulations further investigate drug internalization, interstitial fluid flow in the arterial wall, and stent embedment for their impact on drug delivery. Simulation results show that these three factors, while imposing little change in the drug release profiles, can greatly change the average drug concentrations in the arterial wall. In particular, each of the factors leads to significant and yet distinguished alterations in the arterial drug distribution that can potentially influence the treatment outcomes. The detailed integrated model provides insights into the design and evaluation of biodegradable PLGA-coated drug-eluting stents for improved intravascular drug delivery.


Author(s):  
Marjan Molavi Zarandi ◽  
Rosaire Mongrain ◽  
Olivier F. Bertrand

Drug Eluting Stents (DES) are commonly used for the treatment of stenotic arteries. Restenosis can be treated by delivering anti-thrombotic and anti-proliferative drugs to the arterial wall. The main mechanism of the drug eluting stent is to allow diffusion of the drug from the coating on the stent, into the arterial wall over a prolonged period of time. Investigation of blood flow hemodynamics and shear stress are of great importance in understanding the transport of drugs through the circulatory systems and predicting the performance of drug eluting stents. While drug eluting stent effectively reduces restenosis rate, the conventional drug eluting stent should be optimized to be used in the bifurcation stenting. Various flow patterns due to specific designs of drug eluting stent influence drug delivery. Numerical simulation techniques are appropriate approaches to study such phenomena which can be used to optimize the design of drug eluting stents for bifurcations. In this paper, the complexity of drug eluting stent function in the bifurcation is presented by employing computational fluid dynamics analysis for various stent strut designs. Drug transportation through the lumen and determination of local drug concentrations in arterial wall is carried out for both Newtonian and non-Newtonian flow conditions. It is, to the author’s best knowledge, the first investigation of drug dispersion in arterial bifurcation considering the effects of both the blood rheological properties and stent strut design.


Author(s):  
W. Denny ◽  
B. O’Connell ◽  
J. Milroy ◽  
M. Walsh

Coronary artery disease (CAD), which results in inadequate blood flow to the heart, is responsible for 1 in every 4.8 deaths in the USA (Lloyd-Jones et al., 2009). Currently, there are 16.5 million patients with stable angina and 500,000 new diagnoses annually (Gibbons et al., 2003). CAD has been linked with atherosclerosis since the early 20th century (McMahan et al., 2008) and refers to the localisation of the disease in the coronary arteries. Atherosclerosis is a degenerative disease that affects not only the coronary arteries, but also the carotid and other peripheral arteries in the body.


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