BBC Science Focus

Artificial hearts made from magnets and titanium could save many lives

The revolution­ary design, which was first patched together using plumbing supplies, could begin human trials soon

- TOM IRELAND Tom is a freelance science journalist, and editor of The Biologist, the bi-monthly magazine of the Royal Society Of Biology.

“The design’s great promise is arguably that it’s not at all like an actual human heart”

Heart failure affects over 10 million people in the US and Europe every year and the outlook for patients is often bleak. Medication can only control the condition for so long and most patients require a heart transplant. If your heart slowly failing isn't scary enough. the number of donor hearts that become available each year is tiny compared to the number of people waiting for one. For some patients, their body size or blood type means the chances of finding a donor heart are virtually zero.

Attempts have been made to design artificial hearts since the 1950s, with little success. Many tests of artificial hearts over the years have involved seeing how many days — and it was often days — some poor animal could survive with one installed instead of its natural heart. The complex system of artificial pumps and valves — required to beat over 100,000 times a day and tens of millions of times a year — get worn out, meaning mechanical hearts can start to fail even more rapidly than the diseased hearts they replace.

The few artificial hearts that have been approved for human use are currently only ever used as a last resort, to buy a patient time before a real transplant. Patients have to wear cumbersome power boxes at all times, and wiring runs in and out of their chests, leading to infections.

But a completely new design, known as BiVACOR, could revolution­ise the use of artificial hearts and the way heart failure is treated. Instead of trying to replicate the way a real heart pumps, the device uses a single spinning disc to drive blood to the lungs and body. With the high-tech rotary pump levitating between magnets, there's virtually zero mechanical wear. The lack of other moving parts means the rest of the heart can be made from ultra-robust titanium.

As well as its state-of-the-art levitating disc technology, the BiVACOR heart can adapt its output to the physiologi­cal demands of the patient (so it'll pump faster during exercise) and can be made small enough to fit into a child. It's also hoped that the device can one day be combined with wireless charging technology, meaning that the battery could be implanted into the patient, instead of carried externally.

BiVACOR is the brainchild of Dr Daniel Timms, who began developing artificial hearts when his father Gary, a plumber, suffered a heart attack in 2001. When the problem of heart transplant shortages became clear to him, Timms — still a student at the time — started working on a prototype using 3D printing and plumbing equipment. We had no money to do anything like animal studies, that was just way

too expensive. So my dad and I built a circulatio­n system that replicated the human body,” said Timms, now chief executive of BiVACOR Inc. and an expert in cardiac transplant technology.

“We’d just go to Bunnings, our large hardware store here in Australia, and build up a circulatio­n loop to test to see if

it was RrovidiPI Iood ƃow aPd Rressure to the various areas oH the artifiEial Dody that we Ereated. 6heP we refiPed the

devices from there.”

Back in 2001, spinning disc technology was in its infancy, but it was being used

iP iORlaPts that helR Dlood ƃow iP

damaged areas of the heart. Timms’s idea was to take that technology and use it to design an entire heart from scratch.

“Effectivel­y everyone had given up on

OakiPI a EoORlete total artifiEial heart q

he said. “Instead they were making these little devices that could be placed, say, in the left side only, and were just starting to use spinning disc technology. My approach was: ‘Why don’t you apply that to a total replacemen­t heart?’”

THE 50-YEAR WAIT

6he first artifiEial heart iORlaPtati­oP was EoPduEted iP at the 6eZas

Heart Institute, in Houston. When the RatiePt survived Hor hours without

the heart he was born with, it was seen as a success; hopes were high that artifiEial heart traPsRlaPt­s would DeEoOe

commonplac­e in the decades to come. But it simply hasn’t happened. Over half a century later, cardiac doctors are seeing more patients with heart failure every year, but are still waiting for a device that can reliably do the job of the organ beating away constantly in our chests.

BiVACOR has once again raised hopes

that artifiEial hearts Eould Rut aP ePd to

the fraught and often futile search for donor hearts. The new design has not only raised millions of dollars in funding, but has also has gained support from the Texas Heart Institute, which leads the world in cutting-edge cardiac healthcare.

According to Timms, the design’s great promise is arguably that it’s not at all like an actual human heart. “It’s a bit like

heavier-thaP-air ƃiIht. /other 0ature

Iave Dirds ƃaRRiPI wiPIs with DoPes aPd

tendons and muscles. When we tried to

do that iP the early days oH ƃyiPI it really

didn’t work very well. It wasn’t until we stopped trying to emulate birds and developed propellers and engines that we got off the ground.”

5iPEe $i8#%14 has DeeP workiPI with 0#5# usiPI their

expertise in building ultra-reliable hardware for situations where failure means certain death. The device has been tested in a cow, which reportedly not only remained alive, but was also able to run on a treadmill, as well as other animals. And last year, doctors

teORoraril­y fitted $i8#%14 deviEes

into human patients undergoing

heart traPsRlaPt oReratioPs as a first

step towards human trials. Custommade devices, tailored to the patients’

aPatoOiEal diOePsioPs were fitted to see

if they’d work, before real donor hearts were implanted.

The company is now working towards

its first RroRer huOaP trials. 6he RlaP is

to implant the devices into patients who

EaP’t fiPd a suitaDle heart doPor Hor three

months, and monitor how they perform. Long term, it’s hoped that BiVACOR hearts can replace the total function of the patients’ hearts and offer hope to the millions of people who are waiting or are unsuitable for heart transplant­s. If successful, it will end one of the great challenges of biomedical engineerin­g.

“I had no inclinatio­n that it would turn into what it’s turned into now, none at all,” said Timms. “It was just a crazy idea that I thought somebody else must have already had, or that might move the

field aloPI aPd theP soOeDody would

take it from there.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The spinning disc in the centre of the device is the only moving part in the new artificial heart
The spinning disc in the centre of the device is the only moving part in the new artificial heart

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