Abstract

A miniature grinding wheel (0.85mm diameter) was fabricated by nickel (Ni)-diamond electroplating on a thin (0.65mm outer diameter) flexible hollow stainless steel drive shaft to remove the calcified plaque in coronary and peripheral arteries by atherectomy procedure. To coat electrically nonconductive diamond grits, the drive shaft was submerged in a pile of diamond grit during Ni electroplating. The electroplating current density and temperature were investigated for better surface finishing and Faraday efficiency. The electroplating time to obtain the designed coating thickness was modeled based on Faraday's law of electrolysis and the geometry of drive shaft, wheel, and diamond grit. To validate the miniature wheel performance in atherectomy, grinding experiments were conducted on an atherectomy cardiovascular simulator with a calcified plaque surrogate. The wheel motion, material removal rate, and wheel surface wear were studied via high-speed camera imaging and laser confocal microscopy. The grinding wheel with 80,000rpm rotational speed had an orbital speed of 14,300rpm around the 1.5mm diameter plaque surrogate lumen. After grinding for 120s, the plaque surrogate inner diameter was enlarged to 3.03mm, and no wear or loss of diamond abrasive was observed on the grinding wheel. This study demonstrated that the proposed electroplating process for fabricating miniature grinding wheels could effectively remove the calcified plaque surrogate. This research could lead to a more effective and safer atherectomy device with sub-mm miniature diamond wheels to treat lesions deep in coronary and peripheral arteries.

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