Thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) is widespread in clinical practice for treating aortic diseases but it has relevant systemic complications, such as increase of the cardiac workload due to post-TEVAR aortic stiffening, and local issues such as re-entry tears due to the tissue damage caused by endograft interaction. The present study aims to elucidate these aortic biomechanical mechanisms by coupling ex vivo and in silico analysis. By ex vivo tests, the pulse wave velocity before and after TEVAR is measured. Uni-axial tensile tests are performed to measure regional mechanical response of tissue samples, supplied as input data for the in silico analysis. Numerical analysis is finally performed to compute the wall stress induced by the stent-graft deployment and the arterial pressurization. The ex vivo results highlight an increase of baseline PWV by a mean .78 m/s or 12% after TEVAR with a 100 mm stent-graft (p <.013). In the in silico analysis, the average von Mises stress in the landing zone increases of about 15% and 20% using, respectively stent-graft with radial oversizing of 10% and 20%. This work shows the effectiveness of integrated framework to analyze the biomechanical post TEVAR mechanisms. Moreover, the obtained results quantify the effect of prosthesis selection on the stiffening of the aorta after TEVAR and on the local increase of the aortic wall stress that is proportional to the stent-graft oversizing.

Impact of thoracic endovascular aortic repair on aortic biomechanics: Integration of in silico and ex vivo analysis using porcine model

Bianchi, Daniele
;
2022-01-01

Abstract

Thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) is widespread in clinical practice for treating aortic diseases but it has relevant systemic complications, such as increase of the cardiac workload due to post-TEVAR aortic stiffening, and local issues such as re-entry tears due to the tissue damage caused by endograft interaction. The present study aims to elucidate these aortic biomechanical mechanisms by coupling ex vivo and in silico analysis. By ex vivo tests, the pulse wave velocity before and after TEVAR is measured. Uni-axial tensile tests are performed to measure regional mechanical response of tissue samples, supplied as input data for the in silico analysis. Numerical analysis is finally performed to compute the wall stress induced by the stent-graft deployment and the arterial pressurization. The ex vivo results highlight an increase of baseline PWV by a mean .78 m/s or 12% after TEVAR with a 100 mm stent-graft (p <.013). In the in silico analysis, the average von Mises stress in the landing zone increases of about 15% and 20% using, respectively stent-graft with radial oversizing of 10% and 20%. This work shows the effectiveness of integrated framework to analyze the biomechanical post TEVAR mechanisms. Moreover, the obtained results quantify the effect of prosthesis selection on the stiffening of the aorta after TEVAR and on the local increase of the aortic wall stress that is proportional to the stent-graft oversizing.
2022
FEA; TEVAR; aortic biomechanics; pulse wave velocity
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12610/72065
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