Abstract (EN):
Nowadays, the use of synthetic grafts to bypass occluded arterial sections is common practice
in clinics and hospitals. Success has been achieved in cases involving large diameter blood
vessels. However, for arteries with a diameter less than 5 mm, the success rates for synthetic
grafts have been low mainly due to intimal hyperplasia formation at anastomoses. The
postulated reasons affecting graft failure include compliance mismatch, internal radius
mismatch, Young¿s modulus, and impedance phase angle. Development of a graft that is
mechanically equivalent with a natural artery requires investigation of the mechanics of
arteries and possible grafts. Numerical studies can provide information on how selection
within existing prostheses can influence the patency rate. A computational model is used to
determine design parameters for patient-specific optimal grafts.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
Notes:
SYMP_05: Blood Flow Mechanical Behaviour, Paper ref: 4654, CD-ROM: 6 páginas
No. of pages:
6