Abstract

Conventionally used textile prosthesis for traditional open surgical repair (OSR) of aortic aneurysms have a lower compliance than the native aortic tissue. Graft placements lead to an acute drop in compliance which effects cardiovascular risk and the development of graft related complications. A custom-made spring casing was applied to a Dacron graft segment under physiological pressure conditions within a five-element biventricular mock circulation loop, to investigate experimentally a concept to improve the compliance of a conventional aortic prosthesis by changing the transverse graft cross-section. Two different prosthesis locations, proximal and distal of compliant silicone tubing were used to study uniaxial graft compression with an elastic device. To characterise the devices’ performance by means of pulse pressure (PP), diastolic pressure (Pdia) and pulse wave velocity(PWV), fluid pressures and flow were recorded.In a proximal graft setting (ascending aorta repair) elastic uniaxial compression with a custom-made spring casing (2 cm width) could significantly reduce PP by 10–14% (p < .001) and slowed PWV from 6.7 to 5.2 m/s (22%, p = .002). Applied to a graft in a distal position, the spring casing demonstrated less impact on PP (2–10%), but significantly reduced PWV in this mock aorta segment from 13.7 to 5.5 m/s (60%, p = .004). In conclusion, a newly conceptualised spring casing applied to the external wall of synthetic aortic grafts can reduce PP and slow PWV. By restoring elastic aortic recoil in stiff textile aortic prostheses, the presented concept is a potential solution to improve long-term aortic prosthesis related complications.

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