The field of percutaneous coronary intervention has witnessed many progressions over the last few decades, more recently with the advancement of fully degradable bioabsorbable stents. Bioabsorbable materials, such as metallic alloys and aliphatic polyesters, have the potential to yield stents which provide temporary support to the blood vessel and allow native healing of the tissue to occur. Many chemical and physical reactions are reported to play a part in the degradation of such bioabsorbable materials, including, but not limited to, corrosion mechanisms for metals and the hydrolysis and crystallization of the backbone chains in polymers. In the design and analysis of bioabsorbable stents it is important to consider the effect of each aspect of the degradation on the material's in vivo performance. The development of robust computational modelling techniques which fully capture the degradation behaviour of these bioabsorbable materials is a key factor in the design of bioabsorable stents. A critical review of the current computational modelling techniques used in the design and analysis of these next generation devices is presented here, with the main accomplishments and limitations of each technique highlighted.
The interest in biodegradable polymers for clinical and biomedical engineering applications has seen a dramatic increase in the last 10 years. Recent innovations include bioresorbable polymeric stents (BPS), which are temporary vascular scaffolds designed to restore patency and provide short-term support to a blocked blood vessel, before becoming naturally resorbed over time. BPS offer possibilities to overcome the long-term complications often observed with the permanent metallic stents, well established in the treatment of coronary and peripheral artery disease. From the perspective of designing next generation BPS, the bulk degradation behavior of the polymer material adds considerable complications. Computational modeling offers an efficient framework to predict and provide understanding into the behavior of medical devices and implants. Current computational modeling techniques for the degradation of BPS are either phenomenologically or physically based. In this work, a physically based polymer degradation model is implemented into a number of different computational frameworks to investigate the degradation of a number of polymeric structures. A thermal analogy is presented to implement the degradation model into the commercially available finite-element code, abaqus/standard. This approach is then applied to the degradation of BPS, and the effects of material, boundary condition, and design on the degradation rates of the stents are examined. The results indicate that there is a notable difference in the molecular weight trends predicted for the different materials and boundary condition assumptions investigated, with autocatalysis emerging as a dominant mechanism controlling the degradation behavior. Insights into the scaffolding ability of the various BPS examined are then obtained using a suggested general relationship between Young's modulus and molecular weight.
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