Ross operation, i.e., the use of autologous pulmonary artery to replace diseased aortic valve, has been recently at the center of a vivid debate regarding its unjust underuse in the surgical practice. Keystone of the procedure regards the use of an autologous biologically available graft which would preserve the anticoagulative and tissue homeostatic functions normally exerted by the native leaflets and would harmoniously integrate in the vascular system, allowing for progressive somatic growth of aortic structures. With this respect, recently, some of the authors have successfully pioneered a large animal model of transposition of pulmonary artery in systemic pressure load in order to reproduce the clinical scenario in which this procedure might be applied and allow for the development and testing of different devices or techniques to improve the pulmonary autograft (PA) performance, by testing a bioresorbable mesh for PA reinforcement. In the present work, to support and supplement the in vivo animal experimentation, a mathematical model is developed in order to simulate the biomechanical changes in pulmonary artery subjected to systemic pressure load and reinforced with a combination of resorbable and auxetic synthetic materials. The positive biological effects on vessel wall remodeling, the regional somatic growth phenomena and prevention of dilatative degeneration have been analyzed. The theoretical outcomes show that a virtuous biomechanical cooperation between biological and synthetic materials takes place, stress-shielding guiding the physiological arterialization of vessel walls, consequently determining the overall success of the autograft system

Stress-shielding, growth and remodeling of pulmonary artery reinforced with copolymer scaffold and transposed into aortic position / Nappi, Francesco; Carotenuto, ANGELO ROSARIO; DI VITO, Donato; Spadaccio, Cristiano; Acar, Cristophe; Fraldi, Massimiliano. - In: BIOMECHANICS AND MODELING IN MECHANOBIOLOGY. - ISSN 1617-7959. - 15:5(2016), pp. 1141-1157. [10.1007/s10237-015-0749-y]

Stress-shielding, growth and remodeling of pulmonary artery reinforced with copolymer scaffold and transposed into aortic position

CAROTENUTO, ANGELO ROSARIO;DI VITO, DONATO;FRALDI, MASSIMILIANO
2016

Abstract

Ross operation, i.e., the use of autologous pulmonary artery to replace diseased aortic valve, has been recently at the center of a vivid debate regarding its unjust underuse in the surgical practice. Keystone of the procedure regards the use of an autologous biologically available graft which would preserve the anticoagulative and tissue homeostatic functions normally exerted by the native leaflets and would harmoniously integrate in the vascular system, allowing for progressive somatic growth of aortic structures. With this respect, recently, some of the authors have successfully pioneered a large animal model of transposition of pulmonary artery in systemic pressure load in order to reproduce the clinical scenario in which this procedure might be applied and allow for the development and testing of different devices or techniques to improve the pulmonary autograft (PA) performance, by testing a bioresorbable mesh for PA reinforcement. In the present work, to support and supplement the in vivo animal experimentation, a mathematical model is developed in order to simulate the biomechanical changes in pulmonary artery subjected to systemic pressure load and reinforced with a combination of resorbable and auxetic synthetic materials. The positive biological effects on vessel wall remodeling, the regional somatic growth phenomena and prevention of dilatative degeneration have been analyzed. The theoretical outcomes show that a virtuous biomechanical cooperation between biological and synthetic materials takes place, stress-shielding guiding the physiological arterialization of vessel walls, consequently determining the overall success of the autograft system
2016
Stress-shielding, growth and remodeling of pulmonary artery reinforced with copolymer scaffold and transposed into aortic position / Nappi, Francesco; Carotenuto, ANGELO ROSARIO; DI VITO, Donato; Spadaccio, Cristiano; Acar, Cristophe; Fraldi, Massimiliano. - In: BIOMECHANICS AND MODELING IN MECHANOBIOLOGY. - ISSN 1617-7959. - 15:5(2016), pp. 1141-1157. [10.1007/s10237-015-0749-y]
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
2016_FRALDI_BMMB.pdf

non disponibili

Tipologia: Documento in Post-print
Licenza: Accesso privato/ristretto
Dimensione 2.3 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
2.3 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/659055
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 41
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 40
social impact