| Literature DB >> 30601854 |
Christoph Hehrlein1, Björn Schorch1, Nadia Kress1, Amina Arab1, Constantin von Zur Mühlen1, Christoph Bode1, Thomas Epting2, Jörg Haberstroh3, Lilly Mey4, Hans Schwarzbach4, Ralf Kinscherf4, Vitus Stachniss5, Stefanie Schiestel6, Adalbert Kovacs6, Harald Fischer7, Ernst Nennig7.
Abstract
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30601854 PMCID: PMC6314592 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Zn-3Ag alloy used for the production of a vascular stent.
Microphotographs of the grain size of Zn-3Ag alloy directly after casting (A) and extrusion (B). Zn-3Ag stent expandable to a diameter of 6 mm is shown (C).
Mechanical properties of Zn-3Ag alloy in comparison to bioresorbable (WE43, PLLA) and non-resorbable stent materials (CoCr, NiTi).
| E-modul | Yield strength (MPa) | Tensile strength | Elongation | Density | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CoCr (L-605) | 210[ | 448–648[ | 951–1220[ | 3[ | 9.2[ |
| NiTi (Nitinol) | 83[ | 195–690[ | 895[ | 56[ | 6.7[ |
| Mg (WE43) | 44[ | 195[ | 280[ | 2[ | 1.8[ |
| PLLA | 4[ | 47–77[ | 53[ | 6[ | 1.2[ |
| Zn-3Ag | 95 | 130–145 | 240–260 | 70–135 | 7.2 |
‡measured at Staatliche Materialprüfungsanstalt Darmstadt, Germany, according to DIN EN ISO 6892–1
#calculated.
Fig 2Surface composition of Zn-3Ag.
Shown are XPS spectra of samples obtained after 60 s of sputtering of WE43 (black), Nitinol (red), Zn (green), Zn-3Ag (blue), and PLLA (cyan). For visibility curves were stacked by the following addition: Zn 500 cts/s, Zn-3Ag 1 000 cts/s, and NiTi 1 500 cts/s.
Fig 3Zn-3Ag biodegradation by simulated body fluid.
Zn concentration measured by atom absorption spectroscopy (AAS) after immersion of Zn-3Ag alloy samples in simulated body fluid (SBF) at the time of fluid change for 85 days were shown.
Fig 4Zn-3Ag affects proliferation of HAoSMCs.
Zn and Zn-3Ag reduce proliferation of human aortic smooth muscle cells (HAoSMC). Viable cells surrounding material discs (A), and cells attached directly to the material (B) stained with a green fluorescent cell proliferation (CSFE) kit and red fluorescent propidium-iodide were microphotographed and cell numbers calculated. Significance levels are illustrated as follows: *: p < .05; **: p < .01.
Fig 5Hemocompatibility of Zn-3Ag.
Human blood hemolysis in contact with the stent materials Zn-3Ag, Nitinol, PLLA, and WE43 was measured in vitro. Shown are the results of 6 individual experiments.
Fig 6Comparable platelet adhesion on stent materials.
Platelet adhesion on Zn, Zn-3Ag, Nitinol, PLLA, and WE43 surfaces was measured and quantified in vitro. Quantified are three independent experiments. Significance levels are illustrated as follows: *: p < .05; **: p < .01.
Fig 7Zn-3Ag bioresorbable stents implanted in iliofemoral arteries of pigs.
Fluoroscopic X-ray images of Zn-3Ag bioresorbable vascular stent in porcine iliofemoral arteries immediately post-implantation (A), after 1 month (B), 3 months (C), and 6 months (D) show loss of radiopacity of the stents over time. Angiograms of Zn-3Ag stents reveal vessel patency without marked lumen narrowing or stent thrombosis post-implantation (E), after 1 month (F) after 3 months (G) and after 6 months (H).
Fig 8Zn-3Ag bioresorbable stents are rapidly covered by endothelium.
Histologic images of representative cross-sections of porcine iliofemoral arteries stented with a Zn-3Ag bioresorbable vascular stent after 1 month (A and D), 3 months (B and E), and 6 months (C and F). D, E, and F show magnified stent struts covered by neointima within the corresponding arterial cross-sections A, B, and C.