## Abstract In the present study, the effects of initial collagen fiber orientation on the medium‐term (up to 50 × 10^6^ cycles) fatigue response of heart valve soft tissue biomaterials was investigated. Glutaraldehyde treated bovine pericardium (GLBP), preselected for uniform structure and collage
Response of heterograft heart valve biomaterials to moderate cyclic loading
✍ Scribed by Sun, Wei ;Sacks, Michael ;Fulchiero, Gregory ;Lovekamp, Joshua ;Vyavahare, Naren ;Scott, Michael
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 375 KB
- Volume
- 69A
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9304
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
We have recently demonstrated that noncalcific tissue damage can lead to significant collagen degradation in clinically explanted bioprosthetic heart valves (BHVs). In the present study we quantified the early response of glutaraldehyde treated bovine pericardium (GLBP) to cyclic tensile loading to begin to elucidate the mechanisms of noncalcific tissue degeneration in BHV biomaterials. GLBP specimens were cycled at 30 Hz to a maximum uniaxial strain of 16% (corresponding to approximately 1‐MPa peak stress), with the loading direction parallel to the preferred collagen fiber (PD) direction. After 30 × 10^6^ cycles, specimens were subjected to biaxial mechanical testing, then cycled until 65 × 10^6^ cycles. The results indicated a permanent change in the unloaded tissue dimensions of +7.1% strain in the PD direction and −7.7% strain in the cross fiber direction (XD) after 65 × 10^6^ cycles and an increase of the collagen crimp period from 40.6 to 45.2 μm by 65 × 10^6^ cycles (p = 0.05). Fourier transform IR spectroscopy analysis indicated that cyclic fatigue of GLBP leads to both collagen conformational changes and early denaturation. Furthermore, no significant changes in areal strain were found under 1‐MPa equibiaxial stress, indicating that cyclic loading changed the collagen fiber orientation but not the overall tissue compliance. These observations suggest that while deterioration of collagen begins immediately, fiber straightening and reorientation dominates the changes in the mechanical behavior up to 65 × 10^6^ cycles. The present study underscores the complexity of the response of biologically derived biomaterials to cyclic mechanical loading. Improved understanding of these phenomena can potentially guide the development of novel chemical treatment methods that seek to improve BHV durability by minimizing these degenerative processes. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res 69A: 658–669, 2004
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