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Engineering |
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Henry
Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science |
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UCLA Engineer: Spring
2006
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Collaboration
Results in Novel Heart Valve for Children
Collapsible Heart Valves and Stents made of Super-elastic,
Shape-memory Metal Alloy

Professor Daniel Levi, K. P. Mohanchandra,
Lenka Stepan, and Professor Greg Carman in the lab. |
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Children with congenital heart defects may soon have an alternative
to invasive open-heart surgery that will mean less time in the hospital,
a quicker recovery and no need to break open the breastbone, thanks
to a new collaboration between researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli
School of Engineering and Applied Science and pediatric cardiologists
at Mattel Children’s Hospital at UCLA.
Using a super-elastic, shape-memory metal alloy called “thin film
nitinol,” UCLA engineers are developing a collapsible heart valve
for children that can be loaded into a catheter, inserted into a
vein in the groin area, guided into place and then deployed in a
precise location within the heart. As the valve is released from
the catheter, it springs back to its original shape and begins to
function.
“What is really novel about the valve UCLA Engineering has created
is the memory-retaining alloy and butterfly design that opens or
hinges from the middle of the valve rather than the edges,” said
UCLA mechanical and aerospace engineering professor Gregory
Carman, who, along with UCLA researcher Lenka Stepan, crafted
the valve. “The unobtrusive leaflets within the valve mean there
is no obstruction to blood flow. This smaller, low-profile design
is well suited for children and, over time, will potentially allow
children born with heart valve defects to experience less pain and
live much fuller lives.”
Dr. Daniel Levi, assistant professor of pediatric cardiology at
Mattel Children’s Hospital at UCLA, designed the valve and joined
Carman and Stepan to create and develop the revolutionary new device.
“Using catheters and collapsible valves, heart valves can be replaced
without stopping the heart, without cutting the chest open and without
long recovery times,” Levi said. “This will represent a huge improvement
in care for children living with a very difficult condition.”
A defective heart valve fails to fully open or close, letting blood
leak back into the heart chamber. This condition most often is treated
surgically, and the valve is replaced with a human donor valve,
a porcine valve or a mechanical one. All heart valve replacements
have a limited life span and must be replaced eventually, but for
children, there are even greater complications: the valves do not
grow as children grow, which could mean as many as three or more
open-heart surgeries during childhood and adolescence alone.
Open-heart surgery typically requires three to four days in intensive
care, at least one or two weeks in the hospital and a lengthy recovery
period at home. In contrast, patients who have valves replaced via
catheter could go home as early as the following day, with little
pain.

Thin film nitinol heart valves.
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While catheter-based valve replacement procedures already are revolutionizing
valve replacement for larger patients, smaller children have not
yet benefited from this technology. Although many companies are
competing to develop the ideal transcatheter heart valve, most of
these valves are bulky and can be used only in adults. Thin film
nitinol could allow doctors at UCLA to make a trans-catheter heart
valve suitable for use even in small children.
“By collaborating with UCLA Engineering, we are creating a pediatric
heart valve that has great strength and biocompatibility. It could
mean a shortened procedure, a lower level of risk, and much less
stress on the patient and their family. It also will mean a lower
cost to the health care system,” Levi said. “Our valve is presently
being designed for replacement of the pulmonary valve, but eventually
may also be able to be used for the aortic valve.”
The UCLA team also has used thin film nitinol successfully in other
biomedical applications such as stents — short narrow metal mesh
tubes inserted into an artery or bile duct to keep blocked passageways
open — as well as in other applications.
“Although the medical community has used bulk nitinol for the past
decade in stents and other implantable biomedical devices, thin
film nitinol has yet to be incorporated into a commercially available
biomedical device,” Carman said. “Recent studies we’ve conducted
have shown that thin film nitinol can be used to cover stents and
to provide a barrier in preventing regrowth of tissue into stented
arteries and veins. Beyond its use in either percutaneously or surgically
placed valves, I anticipate that thin film nitinol will have a wide
variety of applications in the development of future implantable
biomedical devices for both adults and children,” Levi added.
In order to bring their new valves and stents for children to market,
UCLA’s Mattel Children’s Hospital and researchers at UCLA Engineering
are seeking to collaborate with industry, but both Levi and Carman
say it will still be a number of years before the valves will be
commercially available.
To date, the research done by Carman and Levi has been supported
by a grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, part of the National Institutes of Health. Thin film
nitinol originally was developed for defense applications with support
from both the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency.
- M. Abraham
Photos: MISA/misaphoto.com
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COPYRIGHT
2004 UCLA |
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