Abstract
To develop and evaluate a technique for measuring the radial resistive force, chronic outward force, and dimensions of self-expanding stents. A Mylar film was looped around the stent, threaded through two carbon fiber rods, and immersed in a 37 degrees C oil bath. A force gauge mounted on a micro-positioning stage was used to measure the applied forces. The apparatus containing the self-expanding nitinol stent (diameter, 40 mm; length, 80 mm) was placed inside a micro-computed tomographic (CT) scanner. At each stent deformation, the load was manually recorded from the force gauge and a micro-CT volume (isotropic voxel spacing, 0.15 mm) obtained. Stent diameter and length were measured from the images, and radial resistive force and chronic outward force were calculated for each deformation. The stress-strain curves indicate that the stents exert much smaller maximum outward forces (1.2 N/cm) than the force that is required to compress them (3.6 N/cm). The forces were measured with a precision of +/-3.3% (standard deviation of five repeated measurements). The stent's diameter was measured with precision better than 0.3% and accuracy of +/-0.1 mm. The authors have developed a radiographic technique that enables precise measurements of radial resistive force, chronic outward force, and the dimensions of self-expanding stents during deformation.
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