Publications by authors named "Geoff Tansley"

Article Synopsis
  • Impaired primary hemostasis and abnormal blood vessel growth (angiogenesis) contribute to gastrointestinal bleeding in patients using continuous-flow left ventricular assist devices (CF-LVADs) in a "two-hit hypothesis."
  • A study examined the effects of acute exercise on blood samples from 22 CF-LVAD patients, measuring changes in hemostatic and angiogenic biomarkers.
  • Results showed that acute exercise significantly increased platelet count and function, as well as various factors related to blood clotting and vessel growth, suggesting potential benefits for GI bleeding management in these patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Due to the high treatment costs associated with durable ventricular assist devices, an intra-ventricular balloon pump (IVBP) was developed to provide low-cost, short-term support for patients suffering from severe heart failure. It is imperative that intraventricular flow dynamics are evaluated with an IVBP to ensure stagnation points, and potential regions for thrombus formation, are avoided. This study used particle image velocimetry to evaluate flow patterns within the left ventricle of a simulated severe heart failure patient with IVBP support to assess left ventricle pulsatility as an indicator of the likelihood of flow stasis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cell exclusion in spiral groove bearing (SGB) excludes red blood cells from high shear regions in the bearing gaps and potentially reduce haemolysis in rotary blood pumps. However, this mechanobiological phenomenon has been observed in ultra-low blood haematocrit only, whether it can mitigate blood damage in a clinically-relevant blood haematocrit remains unknown. This study examined whether cell exclusion in a SGB alters haemolysis and/or high-molecular-weight von Willebrand factor (HMW vWF) multimer degradation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite decades of technological advancements in blood-contacting medical devices, complications related to shear flow-induced blood trauma are still frequently observed in clinic. Blood trauma includes haemolysis, platelet activation, and degradation of High Molecular Weight von Willebrand Factor (HMW vWF) multimers, all of which are dependent on the exposure time and magnitude of shear stress. Specifically, accumulating evidence supports that when blood is exposed to shear stresses above a certain threshold, blood trauma ensues; however, it remains unclear how various constituents of blood are affected by discrete shears experimentally.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Production of bonded permanent magnets (PMs) by processing a mixture of neodymium-iron-boron (Nd-Fe-B) (spherical and flake) and polyamide-12 powders using selective laser sintering (SLS) has focused on increasing the magnetic powder loading fraction to improve the magnetic performance of PMs. However, when using SLS to produce PMs from mixed feedstock, the likelihood of the areas between the magnetic particles being infiltrated by the liquefied binder inducing particle bonding is reduced as binder content is reduced. This decreases mechanical strength and introduces upper limits to the attainable loading fraction of the magnetic powder.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Rotary blood pumps (RBPs) employed as ventricular assist devices are developed to support the ventricles of patients suffering from heart failure. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is frequently used to predict the performance and haemocompatibility of these pumps during development, however different simulation techniques employed by various research groups result in inconsistent predictions. This inconsistency is further compounded by the lack of standardised model validation, thus it is difficult to determine which simulation techniques are accurate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite technological advances in ventricular assist devices (VADs) to treat end-stage heart failure, hemocompatibility remains a constant concern, with supraphysiological shear stresses an unavoidable reality with clinical use. Given that impeller rotational speed is related to the instantaneous shear within the pump housing, it is plausible that the modulation of pump speed may regulate peak mechanical shear stresses and thus ameliorate blood damage. The present study investigated the hemocompatibility of the HeartWare HVAD in three configurations typical of clinical applications: standard systemic support left VAD (LVAD), pediatric support LVAD, and pulmonary support right VAD (RVAD) conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Blood is a non-Newtonian, shear-thinning fluid owing to the physical properties and behaviors of red blood cells (RBCs). Under increased shear flow, pre-existing clusters of cells disaggregate, orientate with flow, and deform. These essential processes enhance fluidity of blood, although accumulating evidence suggests that sublethal blood trauma-induced by supraphysiological shear exposure-paradoxically increases the deformability of RBCs when examined under low-shear conditions, despite obvious decrement of cellular deformation at moderate-to-higher shear stresses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Design methods for large industrial pumps are well developed, but they cannot be relied upon when designing specialised miniature pumps, due to scaling issues. Therefore, the design and development phase of small pumps demand numerous experimental tests to ensure a viable prototype. Of initial interest is hydraulic design in the form of pump performance and efficiency curves.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Blood exposure to supraphysiological shear stress within mechanical circulatory support is suspected of reducing red blood cell (RBC) deformability and being primal in the pathogenesis of several secondary complications. No prior works have explored RBC dynamics with the resolution required to determine shear elastic modulus, and/or cell capillary velocity, following exposure to mechanical stresses. Healthy RBCs were exposed to 0, 5, 50, and 100 Pa in a Couette shearing system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nonsurgical bleeding is the most frequent complication of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) support. Supraphysiologic shear rates generated in LVAD causes impaired platelet aggregation, which increases the risk of bleeding. The effect of shear rate on the formation size of platelet aggregates has never been reported experimentally, although platelet aggregation size can be considered to be directly relevant to bleeding complications.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Due to manufacturer implemented processing parameter restrictions and the cost prohibitive nature of selective laser sintering (SLS) machines, researchers have limited opportunities to explore the processing of new materials using this additive manufacturing (3D printing) process. Accordingly, this article aimed to overcome these limitations by describing the build and operation of a customizable low-cost polymer SLS machine. The machine boasts a three piston powder bed with the center build piston heated by PID controlled ceramic heaters.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: The left atrium and left ventricle are the primary inflow cannulation sites for heart failure patients supported by rotary blood pumps (RBPs). Haemodynamic differences exist between inflow cannulation sites and have been well characterized at rest, yet the effect during exercise with the same centrifugal RBP has not been previously well established. The purpose of this study was to investigate the hemodynamic effect of inflow cannulation site during rest and exercise with the same centrifugal RBP.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Controlled and repeatable in vitro evaluation of cardiovascular devices using a mock circulation loop (MCL) is essential prior to in vivo or clinical trials. MCLs often consist of only a systemic circulation with no autoregulatory responses and limited validation. This study aimed to develop, and validate against human data, an advanced MCL with systemic, pulmonary, cerebral, and coronary circulations with autoregulatory responses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cardiac assist devices require thorough in vitro evaluation prior to in vivo animal trials, which is often undertaken in mock circulatory loops. To allow for best possible device development, mock circulatory loops need to be able to simulate a variety of patient scenarios. Transition from rest to exercise is one of the most commonly simulated patient scenarios, however, to validate in vitro exercise test beds, baseline data on how the healthy heart and circulatory system responds to exercise is required.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Due to improved durability and survival rates, rotary blood pumps (RBPs) are the preferred left ventricular assist device when compared to volume displacement pumps. However, when operated at constant speed, RBPs lack a volume balancing mechanism which may result in left ventricular suction and suboptimal ventricular unloading. Starling-like controllers have previously been developed to balance circulatory volumes; however, they do not consider ventricular workload as a feedback and may have limited sensitivity to adjust RBP workload when ventricular function deteriorates or improves.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rotary ventricular assist devices (VADs) operated clinically under constant speed control (CSC) cannot respond adequately to changes in patient cardiac demand, resulting in sub-optimal VAD flow regulation. Starling-like control (SLC) of VADs mimics the healthy ventricular flow regulation and automatically adjusts VAD speed to meet varying patient cardiac demand. The use of a fixed control line (CL - the relationship between ventricular preload and VAD flow) limits the flow regulating capability of the controller, especially in the case of exercise.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The high cost of ventricular assist devices results in poor cost-effectiveness when used as a short-term bridging solution, thus a low-cost alternative is desirable. The present study aimed to develop an intraventricular balloon pump (IVBP) for short-term circulatory support, and to evaluate the effect of balloon actuation timing on the degree of cardiac support provided to a simulated in vitro severe heart failure (SHF) patient. A silicone IVBP was designed to avoid contact with internal left ventricular (LV) features (ie, papillary muscles, chordae, aortic, and mitral valves) based on LV computed tomography data of 10 SHF patients with dilated cardiomyopathy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bridge to recovery with left ventricular assist device (LVAD) support has been more prominent with volume displacement pumps (VDPs) than with rotary blood pumps (RBPs), which may be due to VDPs providing greater ventricular unloading and coronary artery flow. To compare ventricular unloading and coronary flow of VDPs and RBPs in a repeatable environment, a physiologic coronary circulation was added to a pre-existing mock circulatory loop. In this study, a physiologic coronary circulation, mimicking a healthy or diseased auto-regulatory response was implemented in a mock circulatory loop.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Circulation of blood depends, in part, on the ability of red blood cells (RBCs) to aggregate, disaggregate, and deform. The primary intrinsic disaggregating force of RBCs is derived from their electronegativity, which is largely determined by sialylated glycoproteins on the plasma membrane. Given supraphysiological shear exposure - even at levels below those which induce hemolysis - alters cell morphology, we hypothesized that exposure to supraphysiological and subhemolytic shear would cleave membrane-bound sialic acid, altering the electrochemical and physical properties of RBCs, and thus increase RBC aggregation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although rotary blood pumps (RBPs) sustain life, blood exposure to continuous supra-physiological shear stress induces adverse effects (e.g., thromboembolism); thus, pulsatile flow in RBPs represents a potential solution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rotary blood pumps (RBPs) used for mechanical circulatory support of heart failure patients cannot passively change pump flow sufficiently in response to frequent variations in preload induced by active postural changes. A physiological control system that mimics the response of the healthy heart is needed to adjust pump flow according to patient demand. Thus, baseline data are required on how the healthy heart and circulatory system (i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Patients receiving mechanical circulatory support often present with heightened inflammation and free radical production associated with pre-existing conditions in addition to that which is due to blood interactions with nonbiological surfaces. The aim of this experimental laboratory study was to assess the deformability of red blood cells (RBC) previously exposed to oxygen free radicals and determine the susceptibility of these cells to mechanical forces. In the present study, RBC from 15 healthy donors were washed and incubated for 60 min at 37°C with 50 µM phenazine methosulfate (PMS; an agent that generates superoxide within RBC).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF