An arteriovenous mock circulatory loop and accompanying bond graph model for in vitro study of peripheral intravascular bioartificial organs

Author:

Moyer Jarrett C.1ORCID,Chivukula Venkat Keshav2,Taheri‐Tehrani Parsa1,Sandhu Sukhveer1,Blaha Charles1,Fissell William H.3,Roy Shuvo1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bioengineering and Therapeutic Sciences University of California San Francisco California USA

2. Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering and Sciences Florida Institute of Technology Melbourne Florida USA

3. Division of Nephrology and Hypertension Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSilicon nanopore membrane‐based implantable bioartificial organs are dependent on arteriovenous implantation of a mechanically robust and biocompatible hemofilter. The hemofilter acts as a low‐resistance, high‐flow network, with blood flow physiology similar to arteriovenous shunts commonly created for hemodialysis access. A mock circulatory loop (MCL) that mimics shunt physiology is an essential tool for refinement and durability testing of arteriovenous implantable bioartificial organs and silicon blood‐interfacing membranes. We sought to develop a compact and cost‐effective MCL to replicate flow conditions through an arteriovenous shunt and used data from the MCL and swine to inform a bond graph mathematical model of the physical setup.MethodsFlow physiology through bioartificial organ prototypes was obtained in the MCL and during extracorporeal attachment to swine for biologic comparison. The MCL was tested for stability overtime by measuring pressurewave variability over a 48‐h period. Data obtained in vitro and extracorporeally informed creation of a bond graph model of the MCL.ResultsThe arteriovenous MCL was a cost‐effective, portable system that reproduced flow rates and pressures consistent with a pulsatile arteriovenous shunt as measured in swine. MCL performance was stable over prolonged use, providing a cost‐effective simulator for enhanced testing of peripherally implanted bioartificial organ prototypes. The corresponding bond graph model recapitulates MCL and animal physiology, offering a tool for further refinement of the MCL system.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,General Medicine,Biomaterials,Medicine (miscellaneous),Bioengineering

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