Our review in the 2008 volume of this journal detailed the use of mechanical circulatory support (MCS) for treatment of heart failure (HF). MCS initially utilized bladder-based blood pumps generating pulsatile flow; these pulsatile flow pumps have been supplanted by rotary blood pumps, in which cardiac support is generated via the high-speed rotation of computationally designed blading. Different rotary pump designs have been evaluated for their safety, performance, and efficacy in clinical trials both in the United States and internationally.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: The PediaFlow (HeartWare International, Inc, Framingham, Mass) is a miniature, implantable, rotodynamic, fully magnetically levitated, continuous-flow pediatric ventricular assist device. The fourth-generation PediaFlow was evaluated in vitro and in vivo to characterize performance and biocompatibility.
Methods: Supported by 2 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute contract initiatives to address the limited options available for pediatric patients with congenital or acquired cardiac disease, the PediaFlow was developed with the intent to provide chronic cardiac support for infants as small as 3 kg.
Ventricular assist devices (VADs) have significantly impacted the treatment of adult cardiac failure, but few options exist for pediatric patients. This has motivated our group to develop an implantable magnetically levitated rotodynamic VAD (PediaFlow®) for 3-20 kg patients. The second prototype design of the PediaFlow (PF2) is 56% smaller than earlier prototypes, and achieves 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe PediVAS blood pump is a magnetically levitated centrifugal pump designed for pediatric bridge-to-decision or bridge-to-recovery in pediatric patients from 3-20kg in weight. In preparation for submission of an investigational device exemption (IDE) application, we completed a final six-animal series of pre-clinical studies. The studies were conducted under controlled conditions as prescribed by the recently released FDA guidance document for animal studies for cardiovascular devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Levitronix PediVAS is an extracorporeal magnetically levitated pediatric ventricular assist system with an optimal flow rate range of 0.3-1.5 L/min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArtificial organs education is often an overlooked field for many bioengineering and biomedical engineering students. The purpose of this article is to describe three different approaches to teaching artificial organs. This article can serve as a reference for those who wish to offer a similar course at their own institutions or incorporate these ideas into existing courses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe PediaFlow pediatric ventricular assist device (VAD) is a magnetically levitated turbodynamic pump under development for circulatory support of small children with a targeted flow rate range of 0.3-1.5 L/min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe PediaFlow pediatric ventricular assist device is a miniature magnetically levitated mixed flow pump under development for circulatory support of newborns and infants (3-15 kg) with a targeted flow range of 0.3-1.5 L/min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis report describes a multi-disciplinary program to develop a pediatric blood pump, motivated by the critical need to treat infants and young children with congenital and acquired heart diseases. The unique challenges of this patient population require a device with exceptional biocompatibility, miniaturized for implantation up to 6 months. This program implemented a collaborative, prescriptive design process, whereby mathematical models of the governing physics were coupled with numerical optimization to achieve a favorable compromise among several competing design objectives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn important challenge facing the design of turbodynamic ventricular assist devices (VADs) intended for long-term support is the optimization of the flow path geometry to maximize hydraulic performance while minimizing shear-stress-induced hemolysis and thrombosis. For unshrouded centrifugal, mixed-flow and axial-flow blood pumps, the complex flow patterns within the blade tip clearance between the lengthwise upper surface of the rotating impeller blades and the stationary pump housing have a dramatic effect on both the hydrodynamic performance and the blood damage production. Detailed computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analyses were performed in this study to investigate such flow behavior in blade tip clearance region for a centrifugal blood pump representing a scaled-up version of a prototype pediatric VAD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeart failure (HF) is a major public health problem in the United States, and its prevalence is likely to increase with the aging U.S. population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe treatment of children with life-threatening cardiac and cardiopulmonary failure is a large and underappreciated public health concern. We have previously shown that the CentriMag is a magnetically levitated centrifugal pump system, having the utility for treating adults and large children (1,500 utilized worldwide). We present here the PediVAS, a pump system whose design was modified from the CentriMag to meet the physiological requirements of young pediatric and neonatal patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe very limited options available to treat ventricular failure in children with congenital and acquired heart diseases have motivated the development of a pediatric ventricular assist device at the University of Pittsburgh (UoP) and University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC). Our effort involves a consortium consisting of UoP, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh (CHP), Carnegie Mellon University, World Heart Corporation, and LaunchPoint Technologies, Inc. The overall aim of our program is to develop a highly reliable, biocompatible ventricular assist device (VAD) for chronic support (6 months) of the unique and high-risk population of children between 3 and 15 kg (patients from birth to 2 years of age).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSemin Thorac Cardiovasc Surg Pediatr Card Surg Annu
June 2006
The very limited options available to treat ventricular failure in patients with congenital and acquired heart diseases have motivated the development of a pediatric ventricular assist device (VAD). Our effort involves a consortium consisting of the University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Mellon University, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, World Heart Corporation, and LaunchPoint Technologies, LLC. The overall aim of our program is to develop a highly reliable, biocompatible VAD for chronic support (6 months) of the unique and high-risk population of children between 3 kg and 15 kg (patients from birth to 2 years of age).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptions for the circulatory support of pediatric patients under the age of 5 years are currently limited to short-term extracorporeal devices, the use of which is often complicated by infection, bleeding, and thromboembolism. Recognizing this void, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute solicited proposals for the development of novel circulatory support systems for infants and children from 2 to 25 kg with congenital or acquired cardiovascular disease. Five contracts were awarded to develop a family of devices that includes (1) an implantable mixed-flow ventricular assist device designed specifically for patients up to 2 years of age, (2) another mixed-flow ventricular assist device that can be implanted intravascularly or extravascularly depending on patient size, (3) compact integrated pediatric cardiopulmonary assist systems, (4) apically implanted axial-flow ventricular assist devices, and (5) pulsatile-flow ventricular assist devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated a miniature magnetically levitated centrifugal blood pump intended to deliver 0.3-1.5 l/min of support to neonates and infants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRational design of blood-wetted devices requires a careful consideration of shear-induced trauma and activation of blood elements. Critical levels of shear exposure may be established in vitro through the use of devices specifically designed to prescribe both the magnitude and duration of shear exposure. However, it is exceptionally difficult to create a homogeneous shear-exposure history by conventional means.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver the past several decades, blood-soluble drag reducing polymers (DRPs) have been shown to significantly enhance hemodynamics in various animal models when added to blood at nanomolar concentrations. In the present study, the effects of the DRPs on blood circulation were tested in anesthetized rats exposed to acute hemorrhagic shock. The animals were acutely resuscitated either with a 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOxygen Delivery Index (ODI) was introduced as the ratio of red blood cell concentration (hematocrit) to blood viscosity. The ODI can be considered an indirect characterization of oxygen transport to organs and tissues. ODI was obtained for 98 healthy donors (47 pre-menopausal women and 51 age-matched men).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMechanical damage to blood cells is of considerable concern in the development and use of circulatory assist devices and other blood contacting systems. Furthermore, hemodilution with saline, dextran, and other plasma expanders applied during extracorporeal circulation and dialysis increases red blood cell (RBC) susceptibility to the high shear stresses associated with these procedures. In this paper, we present polyethylene glycol (PEG) as a potential erythrocyte protective agent against mechanically induced cellular trauma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHemodialysis requires reliable frequent access to the patients' vasculature, with blood flow rates of > 300 ml/min. Currently in the U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFlow visualization is typically applied in blood pump development to both confirm the design expectations and identify regions that may be predisposed to blood element deposition and trauma. Rotary pumps, in particular, place high demands on the technique chosen to visualize the flow given the limited visual accessibility of the flow path and the high impeller speeds. Fluorescent image-tracking velocimetry currently is used at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center to visualize flow accurately inside of these pumps both qualitatively and quantitatively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA rotary blood pump inherently provides only one noninvasive "observable'" parameter (motor current) and allows for only one "controllable" parameter (pump speed). To maintain the systemic circulation properly, the pump speed must be controlled to sustain appropriate outlet Hows and perfusion pressure while preventing pulmonary damage caused by extremes in preload. Steady-state data were collected at repeated intervals during chronic trials of the Nimbus AxiPump (Nimbus, Inc.
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