Approximately 7.5 × 106 patients in the US currently suffer from end-stage heart failure. The FDA has recently approved the designations of the Thoratec HeartMate II ventricular assist device (VAD) for both bridge-to-transplant and destination therapy (DT) due to its mechanical durability and improved hemodynamics. However, incidence of pump thrombosis and thromboembolic events remains high, and the life-long complex pharmacological regimens are mandatory in its VAD recipients. We have previously successfully applied our device thrombogenicity emulation (DTE) methodology for optimizing device thromboresistance to the Micromed Debakey VAD, and demonstrated that optimizing device features implicated in exposing blood to elevated shear stresses and exposure times significantly reduces shear-induced platelet activation and significantly improves the device thromboresistance. In the present study, we compared the thrombogenicity of the FDA-approved HeartMate II VAD with the DTE-optimized Debakey VAD (now labeled HeartAssist 5). With quantitative probability density functions of the stress accumulation along large number of platelet trajectories within each device which were extracted from numerical flow simulations in each device, and through measurements of platelet activation rates in recirculation flow loops, we specifically show that: (a) Platelets flowing through the HeartAssist 5 are exposed to significantly lower stress accumulation that lead to platelet activation than the HeartMate II, especially at the impeller-shroud gap regions (b) Thrombus formation patterns observed in the HeartMate II are absent in the HeartAssist 5 (c) Platelet activation rates (PAR) measured in vitro with the VADs mounted in recirculation flow-loops show a 2.5-fold significantly higher PAR value for the HeartMate II. This head to head thrombogenic performance comparative study of the two VADs, one optimized with the DTE methodology and one FDA-approved, demonstrates the efficacy of the DTE methodology for drastically reducing the device thrombogenic potential, validating the need for a robust in silico/in vitro optimization methodology for improving cardiovascular devices thromboresistance.
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February 2014
Research-Article
Thromboresistance Comparison of the HeartMate II Ventricular Assist Device With the Device Thrombogenicity Emulation-Optimized HeartAssist 5 VAD
Wei-Che Chiu,
Wei-Che Chiu
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
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Gaurav Girdhar,
Gaurav Girdhar
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
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Michalis Xenos,
Michalis Xenos
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
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Yared Alemu,
Yared Alemu
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
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Jõao S. Soares,
Jõao S. Soares
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
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Shmuel Einav,
Shmuel Einav
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
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Marvin Slepian,
Marvin Slepian
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
;Sarver Heart Center,
University of Arizona
,Tucson, AZ 85724
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Danny Bluestein
Danny Bluestein
1
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
e-mail: danny.bluestein@stonybrook.edu
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
e-mail: danny.bluestein@stonybrook.edu
1Corresponding author.
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Wei-Che Chiu
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
Gaurav Girdhar
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
Michalis Xenos
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
Yared Alemu
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
Jõao S. Soares
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
Shmuel Einav
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
Marvin Slepian
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
;Sarver Heart Center,
University of Arizona
,Tucson, AZ 85724
Danny Bluestein
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
e-mail: danny.bluestein@stonybrook.edu
Stony Brook University
,Stony Brook, NY 11794-8151
e-mail: danny.bluestein@stonybrook.edu
1Corresponding author.
Contributed by the Bioengineering Division of ASME for publication in the Journal of Biomechanical Engineering. Manuscript received September 8, 2013; final manuscript received December 10, 2013; accepted manuscript posted December 16, 2013; published online February 5, 2014. Editor: Victor H. Barocas.
J Biomech Eng. Feb 2014, 136(2): 021014 (9 pages)
Published Online: February 5, 2014
Article history
Received:
September 8, 2013
Revision Received:
December 10, 2013
Accepted:
December 16, 2013
Citation
Chiu, W., Girdhar, G., Xenos, M., Alemu, Y., Soares, J. S., Einav, S., Slepian, M., and Bluestein, D. (February 5, 2014). "Thromboresistance Comparison of the HeartMate II Ventricular Assist Device With the Device Thrombogenicity Emulation-Optimized HeartAssist 5 VAD." ASME. J Biomech Eng. February 2014; 136(2): 021014. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4026254
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