A photo showing the fibrous structure of the valves. Credit: Sarah Motta, Michael Peters, and Christophe Chantre
Researchers
have developed a method for cheaply producing heart valves in the span of
minutes that are functional immediately after being implanted into sheep. The
scientists call their method "Focused Rotary Jet Spinning," which
they describe as "a cotton-candy machine with a hair dryer behind
it." Though long-term in vivo studies are needed to test the valves'
endurance, they effectively controlled blood flow for an hour in sheep. The
prototype appears June 7 in the journal Matter.
"The two big advantages of our method are speed
and spatial fidelity," says bioengineer Michael Peters of Harvard
University, one of the study's first authors. "We can create really small
fibers—on the nanoscale—that mimic the extracellular matrix that heart valve cells are used to living and growing inside, and we can spin full
valves in a matter of minutes, in contrast to currently available technologies
that can take weeks or months to make."
Pulmonary heart valves are made up of three partially
overlapping leaflets that open and close with every heartbeat. They're
responsible for controlling one-way blood flow through the heart; with every beat, they open fully to allow blood
to flow forwards, and then close fully to prevent blood from flowing backwards.
To make the valves, the researchers use air jets to
direct liquid polymer onto a valve-shaped frame, resulting in a seamless
meshwork of tiny fibers. The valves are designed to be temporary and
regenerative: they provide a porous scaffold for cells to infiltrate, build
upon, and eventually replace as the polymer biodegrades.
A video showing a synthetic heart valve
(manufactured using Focused Rotary Jet Spinning) opening and closing. Credit:
Sarah Motta and Christophe Chantre
"Cells operate at the nanometer scale, and 3D
printing can't reach down to that level, but focused rotary jet spinning can
put nanometer-scale spatial cues in there so that when cells crawl up into that
scaffold, they feel like they're in a heart valve, not a synthetic
scaffold," says senior author and bioengineer Kit Parker of Harvard
University. "There's a certain trickery that's involved."
The team tested the valves' strength, elasticity, and ability to repeatedly
open and close using a pulse duplicator, a machine that simulates the
heartbeat.
"A normal heart valve functions for billions of cycles throughout
one's life, so they're constantly being pulled and stretched and
stimulated," says Peters. "They need to be very elastic and retain
their shape despite these mechanical stimuli, and they also have to be strong
enough to withstand the back pressures from blood trying to flow
backwards."
They also grew heart cells on the valves to test for biocompatibility and to see how well cells could infiltrate the scaffolds. "Valves are in direct contact with blood, so we need to check that the material doesn't cause any thrombosis or obstruction of the blood vessels," says biophysicist Sarah Motta, the study's other first author, who works at Harvard University and the University of Zurich.
An accelerated video showing a valve being
manufactured using Focused Rotary Jet Spinning in under 10 minutes. Credit:
Michael Rosnach and Michael Peters
Finally, the researchers tested the valves' immediate functionality
in sheep, who are a
good animal model for several reasons—the physical forces inside sheep and
human hearts are similar, and sheep hearts also represent an
"extreme" environment for heart valves due to
sheep's accelerated calcium metabolism, which presents an increased risk of
developing calcium deposits, a common complication for heart valve recipients.
Surgeons implanted the valves into two sheep and monitored their position
and function using ultrasound for one hour. Both valves implanted successfully
and were immediately functional, but one sheep's valve dislodged after a few
minutes—the researchers think this occurred because it was the incorrect size
for the animal. In the second sheep, the valve showed good functionality for an
hour, and post-mortem analysis indicated that there were no complications in
terms of tears or thrombus formation and that cells had already begun to
infiltrate and adhere to the valve.
A schematic showing the process of creating heart
valves using Focused Rotary Jet Spinning. Credit: Michael Rosnach
Next, the team
plan to test the valves' performance over a longer duration and in more sheep.
"We want to see how well our valves function over the scale of weeks to
months, and how effectively and quickly the sheep's cells and tissues are
actually remodeling the scaffold," says Peters.
"It's a long slog to develop something that's going to go into a human patient, and it should be long," says Parker. "You have to do a lot of animals before you put something into a human."
by Cell Press
No comments:
Post a Comment