New method may treat arterial disease
November 28th, 2009 - 3:15 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Washington, Nov 28 (IANS) A discovery that grew out of a collaboration between engineers and doctors shows promise in treating peripheral arterial disease (PAD), a common circulatory problem in which narrowed arteries reduce blood flow to the limbs.
The condition is considered a red flag for vascular disease, heart attack and stroke, and its progression can result in the loss of limbs or death.
Now, a team from the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Engineering and Applied Science, working with researchers from its David Geffen School of Medicine, is working to develop a PAD treatment device that can prevent thrombosis in smaller blood vessels.
Their research centres on stents that incorporate a material known as Nitinol, a super-elastic nickel and titanium alloy that has the ability to be deformed and to recover its original shape upon heating.
“What we’ve been doing at UCLA for the last five to 10 years now is working with thin-film Nitinol,” said Greg Carman, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and lead study investigator.
“Nitinol, discovered back in the 1960s, is a shape-memory material. They thought it was going to revolutionise the engineering field. It wasn’t until 1985 that people began to think this material would probably be great to use in a stent,” Carman said.
“The reason they liked it for a stent is because you could bend the material a very large distance and it would return to its original shape. Other metals, such as surgical steel, do not allow such a large shape recovery and, as such, cannot be used in many stenting devices.”
In the early 2000s, Carman’s group started looking into making thin-film Nitinol and accidentally stumbled across a way to fabricate what they believed was very high-quality, uniform-composition Nitinol.
“That’s when we started producing thin-film Nitinol. We weren’t sure where the applications for this novel, very low-profile material would go until we ran into someone in the medical school,” Carman said.
“I immediately saw the promise that thin-film Nitinol had for intravascular and cardiac applications,” said Daniel Levi, paediatric cardiologist and a principal investigator on the team. “Greg and I started working together immediately on stents and a heart valve.”
While there are currently several treatments for PAD, including balloon angioplasty, stenting and bypass surgery, devices used in the last two can frequently cause thrombosis, in which clots form inside blood vessels, obstructing blood flow and leading to serious complications.
- New material may help combat arterial disease - Nov 28, 2009
- New way to treat heart blocks: Drug eluting balloon - Sep 18, 2011
- Stent like device effective for removing blood clots - Feb 06, 2012
- A tap of finger to charge your iPad - Jun 23, 2011
- Maths helping re-design stents for better results - Aug 25, 2010
- Rainbow-trapping scientist opens up new possibilities for data storage - Apr 13, 2011
- New 'smart materials' process to revolutionize manufacturing of products - Sep 02, 2010
- More strokes, fewer heart attacks with carotid stents: Study - Oct 12, 2010
- Artificial artery set to be tested in human trials - Jan 03, 2010
- Genetic switch that increases muscle blood supply identified - Mar 02, 2011
- Laser-based processes may help create better artificial joints, arterial stents - Sep 16, 2009
- Novel computer model to pave way for safer stents - Dec 03, 2009
- New surgical tool peers into heart non invasively - Mar 08, 2011
- Scientists one-step closer to designing methane-powered laptops - Nov 24, 2010
- Study may lead to next-gen nanoelectronic and spintronic devices - Feb 15, 2011
Tags: carman, david geffen school, david geffen school of medicine, peripheral arterial disease, peripheral arterial disease pad, quality uniform, red flag, school of engineering, school of medicine, shape memory, shape recovery, stents, surgical steel, thin film, thrombosis, titanium alloy, ucla school of engineering, uniform composition, university of california los angeles, vascular disease