Literature DB >> 9360108

The cool seal system: a practical solution to the shaft seal problem and heat related complications with implantable rotary blood pumps.

K Yamazaki1, T Mori, J Tomioka, P Litwak, J F Antaki, O Tagusari, H Koyanagi, B P Griffith, R L Kormos.   

Abstract

A critical issue facing the development of an implantable, rotary blood pump is the maintenance of an effective seal at the rotating shaft. Mechanical seals are the most versatile type of seal in wide industrial applications. However, in a rotary blood pump, typical seal life is much shorter than required for chronic support. Seal failure is related to adhesion and aggregation of heat denatured blood proteins that diffuse into the lubricating film between seal faces. Among the blood proteins, fibrinogen plays an important role due to its strong propensity for adhesion and low transition temperature (approximately 50 degrees C). Once exposed to temperature exceeding 50 degrees C, fibrinogen molecules fuse together by multi-attachment between heat denatured D-domains. This quasi-polymerized fibrin increases the frictional heat, which proliferates the process into seal failure. If the temperature of the seal faces is maintained well below 50 degrees C, a mechanical seal would not fail in blood. Based on this "Cool-Seal" concept, we developed a miniature mechanical seal made of highly thermally conductive material (SiC), combined with a recirculating purge system. A large supply of purge fluid is recirculated behind the seal face to augment convective heat transfer to maintain the seal temperature below 40 degrees C. It also cools all heat generating pump parts (motor coil, bearing, seal). The purge consumption has been optimized to virtually nil (< 0.5 cc/day). An ultrafiltration unit integrated in the recirculating purge system continuously purifies and sterilizes the purge fluid for more than 5 months without filter change. The seal system has now been incorporated into our intraventricular axial flow blood pump (IVAP) and newly designed centrifugal pump. Ongoing in vivo evaluation of these systems has demonstrated good seal integrity for more than 160 days. The Cool-Seal system can be applied to any type of rotary blood pump (axial, diagonal, centrifugal, etc.) and offers a practical solution to the shaft seal problem and heat related complications, which currently limit the use of implantable rotary blood pumps.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9360108

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ASAIO J        ISSN: 1058-2916            Impact factor:   2.872


  4 in total

1.  The future of adult cardiac assist devices: novel systems and mechanical circulatory support strategies.

Authors:  Carlo R Bartoli; Robert D Dowling
Journal:  Cardiol Clin       Date:  2011-11       Impact factor: 2.213

2.  Long-term durability test of axial-flow ventricular assist device under pulsatile flow.

Authors:  Masahiro Nishida; Ryo Kosaka; Osamu Maruyama; Takashi Yamane; Akio Shirasu; Eisuke Tatsumi; Yoshiyuki Taenaka
Journal:  J Artif Organs       Date:  2016-11-04       Impact factor: 1.731

3.  EVAHEART: an implantable centrifugal blood pump for long-term circulatory support.

Authors:  Kenji Yamazaki; Shinichiro Kihara; Takehide Akimoto; Osamu Tagusari; Akihiko Kawai; Mitsuo Umezu; Jun Tomioka; Robert L Kormos; Bartley P Griffith; Hiromi Kurosawa
Journal:  Jpn J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2002-11

4.  Study of device malfunctions in patients with implantable ventricular assist devices living at home.

Authors:  Koichi Kashiwa; Takashi Nishimura; Hitoshi Kubo; Hisayoshi Tamai; Atsushi Baba; Minoru Ono; Shinichi Takamoto; Shunei Kyo
Journal:  J Artif Organs       Date:  2010-08-26       Impact factor: 1.731

  4 in total

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