Constitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stents

Percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty followed by drug-eluting stent implantation has been of great benefit in coronary applications, whereas in peripheral applications, success rates remain low. Analysis of healing patterns in successful deployments shows that six months after implantation...

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Main Author: da Silva Soares, Joao Filipe
Other Authors: Moore Jr., James E.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/85939
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-859392013-01-08T10:39:03ZConstitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stentsda Silva Soares, Joao Filipeconstitutive modelingdegradationdegradable polymerstentcardiovascular deviceshydrolysisdamagepoly(lactic acid)elasticityviscoelasticyinternal variable materialsnonlinear materialsscissioncontinuum mechanicsPercutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty followed by drug-eluting stent implantation has been of great benefit in coronary applications, whereas in peripheral applications, success rates remain low. Analysis of healing patterns in successful deployments shows that six months after implantation the artery has reorganized itself to accommodate the increase in caliber and there is no purpose for the stent to remain, potentially provoking inflammation and foreign body reaction. Thus, a fully biodegradable polymeric stent that fulfills the mission and steps away is of great benefit. Biodegradable polymers have a widespread usage in the biomedical field, such as sutures, scaffolds and implants. Degradation refers to bond scission process that breaks polymeric chains down to oligomers and monomers. Extensive degradation leads to erosion, which is the process of mass loss from the polymer bulk. The prevailing mechanism of biodegradation of aliphatic polyesters (the main class of biodegradable polymers used in biomedical applications) is random scission by passive hydrolysis and results in molecular weight reduction and softening. In order to understand the applicability and efficacy of biodegradable polymers, a two pronged approach involving experiments and theory is necessary. A constitutive model involving degradation and its impact on mechanical properties was developed through an extension of a material which response depends on the history of the motion and on a scalar parameter reflecting the local extent of degradation and depreciates the mechanical properties. A rate equation describing the chain scission process confers characteristics of stress relaxation, creep and hysteresis to the material, arising due to the entropy-producing nature of degradation and markedly different from their viscoelastic counterparts. Several initial and boundary value problems such as inflation and extension of cylinders were solved and the impacts of the constitutive model analyzed. In vitro degradation of poly(L-lactic acid) fibers under tensile load was performed and degradation and reduction in mechanical properties was dependent on the mechanical environment. Mechanical testing of degraded fibers allowed the proper choice of constitutive model and its evolution. Analysis of real stent geometries was made possible with the constitutive model integration into finite element setting and stent deformation patterns in response to pressurization changed dramatically as degradation proceeded.Texas A&M UniversityMoore Jr., James E.Rajagopal, Kumbakonam R.2008-10-10T20:56:47Z2008-10-10T20:56:47Z2008-052008-10-10T20:56:47ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtextelectronicborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/85939en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic constitutive modeling
degradation
degradable polymer
stent
cardiovascular devices
hydrolysis
damage
poly(lactic acid)
elasticity
viscoelasticy
internal variable materials
nonlinear materials
scission
continuum mechanics
spellingShingle constitutive modeling
degradation
degradable polymer
stent
cardiovascular devices
hydrolysis
damage
poly(lactic acid)
elasticity
viscoelasticy
internal variable materials
nonlinear materials
scission
continuum mechanics
da Silva Soares, Joao Filipe
Constitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stents
description Percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty followed by drug-eluting stent implantation has been of great benefit in coronary applications, whereas in peripheral applications, success rates remain low. Analysis of healing patterns in successful deployments shows that six months after implantation the artery has reorganized itself to accommodate the increase in caliber and there is no purpose for the stent to remain, potentially provoking inflammation and foreign body reaction. Thus, a fully biodegradable polymeric stent that fulfills the mission and steps away is of great benefit. Biodegradable polymers have a widespread usage in the biomedical field, such as sutures, scaffolds and implants. Degradation refers to bond scission process that breaks polymeric chains down to oligomers and monomers. Extensive degradation leads to erosion, which is the process of mass loss from the polymer bulk. The prevailing mechanism of biodegradation of aliphatic polyesters (the main class of biodegradable polymers used in biomedical applications) is random scission by passive hydrolysis and results in molecular weight reduction and softening. In order to understand the applicability and efficacy of biodegradable polymers, a two pronged approach involving experiments and theory is necessary. A constitutive model involving degradation and its impact on mechanical properties was developed through an extension of a material which response depends on the history of the motion and on a scalar parameter reflecting the local extent of degradation and depreciates the mechanical properties. A rate equation describing the chain scission process confers characteristics of stress relaxation, creep and hysteresis to the material, arising due to the entropy-producing nature of degradation and markedly different from their viscoelastic counterparts. Several initial and boundary value problems such as inflation and extension of cylinders were solved and the impacts of the constitutive model analyzed. In vitro degradation of poly(L-lactic acid) fibers under tensile load was performed and degradation and reduction in mechanical properties was dependent on the mechanical environment. Mechanical testing of degraded fibers allowed the proper choice of constitutive model and its evolution. Analysis of real stent geometries was made possible with the constitutive model integration into finite element setting and stent deformation patterns in response to pressurization changed dramatically as degradation proceeded.
author2 Moore Jr., James E.
author_facet Moore Jr., James E.
da Silva Soares, Joao Filipe
author da Silva Soares, Joao Filipe
author_sort da Silva Soares, Joao Filipe
title Constitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stents
title_short Constitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stents
title_full Constitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stents
title_fullStr Constitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stents
title_full_unstemmed Constitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stents
title_sort constitutive modeling for biodegradable polymers for application in endovascular stents
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/85939
work_keys_str_mv AT dasilvasoaresjoaofilipe constitutivemodelingforbiodegradablepolymersforapplicationinendovascularstents
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