Biomechanics and Remodeling in Native and Engineered Arteries
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Abstract
Despite advances over the past 25 years, a pressing clinical need remains to develop small diameter tissue engineered blood vessels
(TEBV) with low thrombogenicity and immune responses, suitable mechanical properties, and a capacity to remodel to their environment.
One promising technology for developing a TEBV is the self-assembly approach. This approach consists of culturing vascular cells to
form sheets of cells and extracellular matrix, then rolling these sheets around a mandrel and culturing them to form a tubular structure.
Sheets made from different cell types (e.g. SMCs versus fibroblasts) can be combined to produce heterogeneous vessels containing
media-like and adventitia-like layers; vessels may also be seeded with endothelial cells to form a functional endothelium. This presentation
reviews recent studies conducted in our lab that characterize the biomechanical properties of both native arteries and engineered tissues
and the implications of these findings on defining appropriate design criteria for a coronary by-pass graft. Biomechanical testing and
parameter estimation to characterize the mechanical behavior of the media-like and adventitia-like self assembly-derived TEBV are be
presented and compared to TEBV constructed from competing tissue engineering strategies (e.g., collagen gels), as well as representative
data from human coronary arteries taken from the literature. The predictive capability of the constitutive model is be demonstrated by
comparing modeling predictions to experimental data from two-layer self assembly-derived TEBV. Finally, modeling results are presented
to test novel fabrication strategies to control the mechanical behavior of self assembly-derived TEBV.
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Date
2010-04-20
Extent
53:17 minutes
Resource Type
Moving Image
Resource Subtype
Lecture