PROSTHETIC TISSUE VALVE AND METHOD OF PREPARING THE SAME
20200147268 ยท 2020-05-14
Assignee
Inventors
- Kongrong Karl Pan (Suzhou, CN)
- Yi Zhang (Suzhou, CN)
- Guozheng Cheng (Suzhou, CN)
- Kun Zhang (Suzhou, CN)
- Jinjin Zhang (Suzhou, CN)
Cpc classification
A01N1/0289
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L27/3882
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L27/3691
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A01N1/0284
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L2430/20
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61L27/36
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
The present disclosure provides a prosthetic tissue valve and a preparation method thereof. The preparation method consists of a lyophilization process of soaked biological tissues under preset condition to obtain a lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve, which provides a technical support for pre-loading the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve onto the delivery device immediately after manufacture. The preset conditions may include a cooling process with a cooling rate of which the temperature decreases from room temperature to a lyophilization temperature, the lyophilization temperature of 200 C.-0 C., and a pressure of 1 Pa-102 kPa. In such a way of preparation, the present disclosure can provide a lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve.
Claims
1. A method of preparing a prosthetic tissue valve, consisting of, under preset conditions, performing lyophilization to soaked biological tissues, to obtain lyophilized prosthetic tissue valves, which provides a technical support for pre-loading the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve into the delivery device immediately after manufacture, wherein the preset conditions consist of: a cooling process with a cooling rate of which the temperature decreases from room temperature to a lyophilization temperature; the lyophilization temperature of 200 C.-0 C.; and a pressure of 1 Pa-102 kPa, wherein, after the cooling process, the lyophilization temperature condition and the pressure condition are applied to the biological tissues during the lyophilization at the same time.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the cooling rate is 0.5 C./min-30 C./s; and the cooling rate is a constant rate during the entire cooling process or variable for different temperature ranges to control crystallization exotherms and sizes and distribution of final crystals.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the lyophilization process lasts for 4 hours-72 hours.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the biological tissues are mammalian tissues, wherein the mammalian tissues comprise at least one of the following tissues: mammalian pericardiums, aortic valves, mitral valves, tricuspid valves, pulmonary valves, skins, pleura, and venous valved conduits.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the soaked biological tissues are lyophilized under the preset conditions, followed by a cutting process to reach a certain size, to obtain the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valves.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein under the preset conditions, prior to the lyophilization, the preparation method further comprises cutting the soaked biological tissues to reach a certain size to obtain wet prosthetic tissue valves; and under the preset conditions, lyophilization is performed to the biological tissues to obtain the lyophilized tissue valves.
7. A prosthetic tissue valve, which is a lyophilized tissue valve obtained from soaked biological tissues under preset conditions, wherein the preset conditions consist of: a cooling process with a cooling rate of which the temperature decreases from room temperature to a lyophilization temperature; the lyophilization temperature of 200 C.-0 C.; and a pressure of 1 Pa-102 kPa, wherein, after the cooling process, the biological tissues are treated at the lyophilization temperature and the pressure at the same time.
8. The prosthetic tissue valve according to claim 7, wherein the cooling rate is 0.5 C./min-30 C./s; and the cooling rate is a constant rate during the entire cooling process or variable for different temperature ranges to control crystallization exotherms and sizes and distribution of final crystals.
9. The prosthetic tissue valve according to claim 7, wherein the lyophilization process lasts for 4 hours-72 hours.
10. The prosthetic tissue valve according to claim 7, wherein the prosthetic tissue valves are used as aortic valves, mitral valves, tricuspid valves, and pulmonary valves.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008] In order to clarify embodiments in the present disclosure, appended figures, which are referred in the embodiments, are described in detail as the following. The appended figures described in the following only reflect a part of the embodiments. Without any creative endeavor, skilled personnel in the art may obtain other figures based on the figures included in the present disclosure.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023] Referring to the appended figures, a precise and complete description of the embodiments is provided in the present disclosure as the following. Apparently, the present disclosure can be implemented by, but not limited to the provided embodiments.
[0024]
[0025] A block S101 includes, under preset conditions, cooling and lyophilizing biological tissues after soaking, to obtain lyophilized prosthetic tissue valves, which provides a technical support for pre-loading the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve into the delivery device immediately after manufacture. The preset conditions may include cooling rate and a lyophilization temperature at 200 C.-0 C.
[0026] More specifically, in one embodiment, the biological tissues in S101 may be mammal tissues, which may be anyone from pericardium (such as bovine pericardium, porcine pericardium, equine pericardium, pericardium from donkeys, and the like), aortic valves, mitral valves, tricuspid valves, pulmonary valves, skin, and tissues from venous valved conduits. In other embodiments, the biological tissues may be from other sources, and should not be limited by the present disclosure.
[0027] In another embodiment, the above-mentioned cooling rate may be 0.5 C./min-30 C./s, and the lyophilization temperature may be at 200 C.-0 C., such as 0 C., 5 C., 10 C., 15 C., 20 C., 25 C., 30 C., 35 C., 40 C., 50 C., 60 C., 70 C., 80 C., 90 C., 100 C., 150 C., 200 C., and the like.
[0028] In another embodiment, the above-mentioned present conditions include pressure and/or time for lyophilization, wherein the pressure may be 1 Pa102 Kpa, such as 1 Pa, 10 Pa, 20 Pa, 30 Pa, 40 Pa, 50 Pa, 100 Pa, 200 Pa, 500 Pa, 1 KPa, 10 KPa, 50 KPa, 100 KPa, 102 KPa, and the like; and the time may be 4 h72 h, such as 4 h, 6 h, 8 h, 10 h, 12 h, 14 h, 16 h, 18 h, 20 h, 22 h, 24 h, 30 h, 36 h, 42 h, 48 h, 60 h, 72 h, and the like.
[0029] The above mentioned lyophilization process can maximize the conservation of the spatial structure of the biological tissues, and maintain the softness and bioactivity of the biological tissues in the lyophilized form, which further reduce the cost of the preparation and transportation of the prosthetic tissue valves, and simplify the operations involved in the utilization, providing technical support for pre-loading the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve into the delivery device immediately after manufacture.
[0030] Due to individual differences among patients, the size of the appropriate prosthetic tissue valves may be varied. In one embodiment, the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve may be obtained by the block S101, followed by a cutting process to reach a certain size.
[0031] Also, in other embodiments, the process of cutting the prosthetic tissue valve may be performed prior to the block S101. Detailed operations may include soaking biological tissues, followed by cutting the biological tissue into a certain size to obtain a wet tissue valve. The block S101 includes lyophilization of the wet prosthetic tissue valve under preset conditions to obtain a lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve.
[0032] Furthermore, the present disclosure is to provide a prosthetic tissue valve, which may be obtained by a method described in any of the following embodiments. The obtained tissue valves may be applied as aortic valves, mitral valves, tricuspid valves, and pulmonary valves.
[0033] Embodiments are provided in the present disclosure to further demonstrate the prosthetic tissue valves and the preparation method thereof. The physical properties of the wet and dry biological valves provided in the following embodiments are detected under the same evaluation criteria, and the same conditions.
Embodiment 1
[0034] Bovine pericardiums (wet samples) may be provided, and cooled to reach 0 C. at 0.5 C./min, and then lyophilized for 6 hours at the temperature of 0 C. under a pressure of 100 Pa, to obtain a dry bovine pericardiums (dry samples). The dry bovine pericardiums may be sewn to obtain a heart valve.
Embodiment 2
[0035] Porcine pericardiums (wet samples) may be provided, cooled to reach 5 C. at 0.5 C./min, followed by cooling to reach 20 C. at 5 C./min, and then lyophilized for 12 hours at the temperature of 20 C., under a pressure of 200 Pa, to obtain a dry porcine pericardiums (dry samples). The dry porcine pericardiums may be sewn to obtain a heart valve.
Embodiment 3
[0036] Aortic valves (wet samples) may be provided, cooled to reach 5 C. at 1 C./min, followed by cooling to reach 40 C. at 30 C./min, and then lyophilized for 48 hours at the temperature of 40 C., under a pressure of 300 Pa, to obtain dry aortic valves (dry samples). The dry aortic valves may be sewn to obtain a heart valve.
Embodiment 4
[0037] Bovine pericardiums (wet samples) may be provided, cooled to reach 5 C. at 1 C./min, followed by cooling to reach 35 C. at 10 C./s, then cooled to reach 60 C. at 5 C./min, and then lyophilized for 48 hours at the temperature of 60 C. under a pressure of 500 Pa, to obtain dry bovine pericardiums (dry samples). The dry bovine pericardiums may be sewn to obtain a heart valve.
[0038] Micro-structures of the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valves obtained from the above embodiments may be observed under scanning electronic microscope, and the microscopic photographs are illustrated in
[0039] Referring to
[0040] In order to guarantee qualities of prosthetic tissue valves, prior to any clinical use, durability tests should be performed as per GB/T1449.3-2016 standards, including tests for the appearance of the valve leaflets and fluid dynamic tests.
[0041] To be specific,
[0042] The results of the fluid dynamic tests of the wet samples and dry samples obtained from the four embodiments after 20010.sup.6 times of cycles are shown in the following table. The table suggests that effective opening areas (EOA) and total valvular regurgitation of the dry samples are comparable to the respective wet samples.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Durability test results of the samples obtained from the 4 embodiments Embodiment 1 Embodiment 2 Embodiment 3 Embodiment 4 Wet Dry Wet Dry Wet Dry Wet Dry Testing Items samples samples samples samples samples samples samples samples Effective 2.59 2.59 2.51 2.54 2.46 2.50 2.39 2.44 opening area (EOA, cm.sup.2) regurgitation 9.40 8.43 9.90 6.79 6.81 5.82 5.44 5.07 fraction (forward flow %)
[0043] To summarize, the properties of the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valves provided in the present disclosure are comparable to those of the respective wet tissue valves, which provides a technical support for pre-loading the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valve into the delivery device immediately after manufacture.
[0044] Differentiating from current available techniques in the art, the preparation method for prosthetic tissue valves provided in the present disclosure includes lyophilization of biological tissues after soaking under preset conditions, to obtain lyophilized prosthetic tissue valves. The preparation method for prosthetic tissue valves provided in the present disclosure optimizes the conservation of the spatial structures of the biological tissues, and therefore, the softness and bioactivities of the prosthetic tissue valves can be maintained in the lyophilized form. Preparation of prosthetic tissue valves in such a way may reduce the cost of manufacture and transportation of the prosthetic tissue valves, simplify the operations involved in the utilization, and may provide technical support for pre-loading the lyophilized prosthetic tissue valves into the delivery devices immediately after manufacture.
[0045] The present disclosure is to provide, but not limited to the embodiments. The present disclosure includes any structural and process equivalent transformation based on the specification and the appended figures, and any direct and indirect use of the described techniques.