Abstract

Use of bovine pericardium as an engineered biomaterial in the fabrication of bioprosthetic heart valves is limited, in part, by substantial intra- and intersac variations in its fibrous structure. To quantitatively assess this variability, we determined the fiber architecture of 20 whole BP sacs. Each sac was mounted on a prolate spheroidal mold, cleared and preserved in 100% glycerol, then sectioned into four equisized quadrants. This preparation method allowed for accurate intersac comparisons and minimized tissue distortions. The fiber architecture was evaluated by small-angle light scattering (SALS) using a 2.54-mm rectilinear grid resulting in approximately 1200 SALS measurements per quadrant, along with tissue thickness measured at 55 locations per quadrant. The fiber architecture was described in terms of fiber preferred directions, degree of orientation, and asymmetry of the fiber angular distribution. The BP sac fiber architecture demonstrated substantial intra- and intersac variability, with local fiber preferred directions changing by as much as 90 degrees within approximately 5 mm. Overall, most sacs revealed potential selection areas in the apex region characterized by a high degree of orientation, high uniformity in fiber preferred directions, and uniform tissue thickness. However, the size, location, and fiber orientation of these potential selection areas varied sufficiently from sac-to-sac to question whether anatomic location alone is sufficient for consistent localization of regions of high structural uniformity suitable for improved BHV design.

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