In Vitro Hydrodynamic, Transient, and Overtime Performance of a Miniaturized Valve for Hydrocephalus
Author(s)
Amjad, Usamma; Appel, Jennie; Lei, Ting; Chae, Junseok; Elhadi, Ali M.; Preul, Mark C.; Bristol, Ruth E.; Schwerdt, Helen; ... Show more Show less
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Reliable cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) draining methods are needed to treat hydrocephalus, a chronic debilitating brain disorder. Current shunt implant treatments are characterized by high failure rates that are to some extent attributed to their length and multiple components. The designed valve, made of hydrogel, steers away from such protracted schemes and intends to provide a direct substitute for faulty arachnoid granulations, the brain’s natural CSF draining valves, and restore CSF draining operations within the cranium. The valve relies on innate hydrogel swelling phenomena to strengthen reverse flow sealing at idle and negative pressures thereby alleviating common valve failure mechanisms. In vitro measurements display operation in range of natural CSF draining (cracking pressure, P[subscript T] ~ 1–110 mmH[subscript 2]O and outflow hydraulic resistance, R[subscript h] ~ 24–152 mmH[subscript 2]O/mL/min), with negligible reverse flow leakage (flow, Q[subscript O] > −10 µL/min). Hydrodynamic measurements and over-time tests under physically relevant conditions further demonstrate the valve’s operationally-reproducible properties and strengthen its validity for use as a chronic implant.
Date issued
2015-03Department
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MITJournal
Annals of Biomedical Engineering
Publisher
Springer US
Citation
Schwerdt, Helen N., Usamma Amjad, Jennie Appel, Ali M. Elhadi, Ting Lei, Mark C. Preul, Ruth E. Bristol, and Junseok Chae. “In Vitro Hydrodynamic, Transient, and Overtime Performance of a Miniaturized Valve for Hydrocephalus.” Ann Biomed Eng 43, no. 3 (March 2015): 603–615.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0090-6964
1573-9686