Hemocompatibility of styrenic block copolymers for use in prosthetic heart valves

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Abstract

Certain styrenic thermoplastic block copolymer elastomers can be processed to exhibit anisotropic mechanical properties which may be desirable for imitating biological tissues. The ex-vivo hemocompatibility of four triblock (hard–soft–hard) copolymers with polystyrene hard blocks and polyethylene, polypropylene, polyisoprene, polybutadiene or polyisobutylene soft blocks are tested using the modified Chandler loop method using fresh human blood and direct contact cell proliferation of fibroblasts upon the materials. The hemocompatibility and durability performance of a heparin coating is also evaluated. Measures of platelet and coagulation cascade activation indicate that the test materials are superior to polyester but inferior to expanded polytetrafluoroethylene and bovine pericardium reference materials. Against inflammatory measures the test materials are superior to polyester and bovine pericardium. The addition of a heparin coating results in reduced protein adsorption and ex-vivo hemocompatibility performance superior to all reference materials, in all measures. The tested styrenic thermoplastic block copolymers demonstrate adequate performance for blood contacting applications.

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Brubert, J., Krajewski, S., Wendel, H. P., Nair, S., Stasiak, J., & Moggridge, G. D. (2016). Hemocompatibility of styrenic block copolymers for use in prosthetic heart valves. Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine, 27(2), 1–12. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10856-015-5628-7

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