Long-Term Efficacy of Biodegradable Metal–Polymer Composite Stents After the First and the Second Implantations into Porcine Coronary Arteries
Swine
Iron
Polyesters
02 engineering and technology
Coronary Angiography
Coronary Vessels
Corrosion
Absorbable Implants
Materials Testing
Animals
Stents
0210 nano-technology
Tomography, Optical Coherence
DOI:
10.1021/acsami.0c00971
Publication Date:
2020-03-11T17:35:30Z
AUTHORS (14)
ABSTRACT
A biodegradable coronary stent is expected to eliminate the adverse events of an otherwise eternally implanting material after vessel remodeling. Both biocorrodible metals and biodegradable polymers have been tried as the matrix of the new-generation stent. Herein, we utilized a metal-polymer composite material to combine the advantages of the high mechanical strength of metals and the adjustable degradation rate of polymers to prepare the biodegradable stent. After coating polylactide (PLA) on the surface of iron, the degradation of iron was accelerated significantly owing to the decrease of local pH resulting from the hydrolysis of PLA, etc. We implanted the metal-polymer composite stent (MPS) into the porcine artery and examined its degradation in vivo, with the corresponding metal-based stent (MBS) as a control. Microcomputed tomography (micro-CT), coronary angiography (CA), and optical coherence tomography (OCT) were performed to observe the stents and vessels during the animal experiments. The MPS exhibited faster degradation than MBS, and the inflammatory response of MPS was acceptable 12 months after implantation. Additionally, we implanted another MPS after 1-year implantation of the first MPS to investigate the result of the MPS in the second implantation. The feasibility of the biodegradable MPS in second implantation in mammals was also confirmed.
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