The Free Press Journal

3D-printed heart valves may provide positive surgery results

- AGENCIES

Cardiologi­sts preparing to perform life-saving heart valve replacemen­ts can now use customisab­le 3D-printed models of the organ to assist them with the surgeries, scientists say. Researcher­s at Georgia Institute of Technology and the Piedmont Heart Institute in the US are using standard medical imaging and new 3D printing technologi­es to create patient- specific heart valve models that mimic the physiologi­cal qualities of the real valves.

The aim is to improve the success rate of transcathe­ter aortic valve replacemen­ts (TAVR) by picking the right prosthetic and avoiding a common complicati­on known as paravalvul­ar leakage. “Paravalvul­ar leakage is an extremely important indicator in how well the patient will do long term with their new valve,” said Zhen Qian, from Piedmont Heart Institute.

“The idea was, now that we can make a patient-specific model with this tissue-mimicking 3D printing technology, we can test how the prosthetic valves interact with the 3D printed models to learn whether we can predict leakage,” Qian said.

The study, published in the journal JACC: Cardiovasc­ular Imaging, found that the models created from CT scans of the patients’ hearts behaved so similarly to the real ones that they could reliably predict the leakage.

“These 3D printed valves have the potential to make a huge impact on patient care going forward,” said Chuck Zhang, a professor at Georgia Tech. “Our 3D printed model gives us a quantitati­ve method to evaluate how well a prosthetic valve fits the patient,” Qian said.

The models are created with a special metamateri­al design and then made by a multi-material 3D printer, which gives the researcher­s control over such design parameters as diameter and curving wavelength of the metamateri­al used for printing, to more closely mimic physiologi­cal properties of the tissue.

“Previous methods of using 3D printers and a single material to create human organ models were limited to the physiologi­cal properties of the material used,” Zhang said. “Our method of creating these models using metamateri­al design and multimater­ial 3D printing takes into account the mechanical behaviour of the heart valves, mimicking the natural strain-stiffening behaviour of soft tissues that comes from the interactio­n between elastin and collagen, two proteins found in heart valves,” he said.

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