Preparation of 4D printed peripheral vascular stent and its degradation behavior under fluid shear stress after deployment†
Abstract
Shape memory stents are mild intervention devices for vascular diseases as compared to balloon-dilated ones; however, their degradation behavior under blood shear stress after deployment also deserves further attention. To understand the degradation behavior, we first prepared 4D printed poly(lactic acid) (PLA) stents via 3D printing technology and studied their failure behavior in a dynamic condition after self-expandable deployment. Mechanical property tests showed that the 4D printed stents had a compression force of 0.06–0.39 N mm−1 and a recovery ratio of 85.3–93.4%, respectively, which was verified to be wall thickness dependent. The stents were then implanted in simulated blood vessels with minimal microstructural damage at 60 °C followed by 8-week degradation tests. The results showed the microstructure damage caused by deployment could accelerate the degradation of stents faster than fluid shear stress. Furthermore, we conducted microstructural analysis and numerical simulation on the stent by finite element analysis (FEA) to explain the relationship between stent injury, vascular injury, and stent deployment temperature. A physical model derived from micro-morphologies on the degradation mechanism of PLA was also proposed. These results may provide new insights for the examination of the degradation behavior of 4D printed stents and minimize medical risk.