PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2026

A Versatile Engineering Platform for the Fabrication of Prosthetic Venous Valves Using Electrospinning

Arcuti D, Mansi S, et al.

Advanced Healthcare Materials

Technical University of Munich, Universidad de Valladolid, Ludwig - Maximilians - University Munich, Munich Heart Alliance

RESEARCH SUMMARY
Chronic venous insufficiency (CVI) is commonly driven by venous valvular incompetence, yet clinically viable prosthetic venous valves (PVVs) remain limited by thrombosis and leaflet thickening from intimal hyperplasia. This study presents a flexible electrospinning-based engineering platform for percutaneous PVVs that fully embeds commercial (or custom) stent struts within an electrospun cover that continues luminally to form thin valve leaflets. By integrating a continuous fibrous barrier between leaflets and the vessel wall, the design aims to limit access of hyperproliferating vascular cells to the leaflets while also isolating stent struts from direct blood contact. The authors demonstrate broad manufacturability across stent architectures (open/closed cell), diameters (e.g., 6–14 mm), and leaflet geometries (bi- and tricuspid), including the ability to place single or multiple valves at arbitrary positions within long venous stents. Beyond single-material thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) valves, the platform enables multi-material constructs via dual electrospinning to tailor blood-contacting surfaces, exemplified by TPU lined with elastin-like recombinamers (ELRs). The ELR/TPU layered constructs showed improved hemocompatibility in vitro (reduced platelet adhesion; non-hemolytic behavior) and supported endothelialization. Functional hydrodynamic testing in a mock circulatory system under venous-relevant pressures/flows demonstrated unobstructed opening/closure with low transvalvular pressure drop, favorable effective orifice area, and low regurgitation; valves also tolerated crimping and simulated delivery without loss of performance. The platform’s versatility was further illustrated by fabricating and testing small-diameter pediatric-style tricuspid heart valve prostheses under ISO-referenced conditions, suggesting broader applicability of the fabrication approach beyond venous reflux repair.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

BioTester

Biaxial mechanical characterization of the electrospun valve materials was performed using a CellScale BioTester 3000 to quantify the anisotropic tensile response of the electrospun matrices that form the covered-stent/leaflet structures. Square specimens (15 mm × 15 mm) were prepared from (i) single-material electrospun TPU and (ii) trilayered ELR/TPU constructs produced on a 10 mm diameter rotating cylindrical collector (50 rpm) under valve-production conditions; thickness was measured with a digital thickness gauge. Samples were mounted on the BioTester’s hooks to create an effective test area of 10 mm × 10 mm. Biaxial tensile strain was applied at 0.1 mm/s while axial and circumferential forces were recorded continuously using a 5 N load cell. Stress–strain curves were generated in both directions and tensile moduli were computed from the slopes in low-strain (0–5%) and higher-strain (20–40%) ranges using a custom MATLAB script. These BioTester results were used to compare the nonlinear hyperelastic response and slight anisotropy of TPU versus layered ELR/TPU constructs, supporting interpretation of leaflet/stent-cover mechanical behavior relevant to valve function and durability.
AUTHORS

Dario Arcuti, Salma Mansi, Dominic Biebl, Malin Reuter, Maximilian Grab, José Carlos Rodríguez-Cabello, Petra Mela.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Advanced Healthcare Materials

YEAR

2026

INSTITUTIONS

Technical University of Munich, Universidad de Valladolid, Ludwig - Maximilians - University Munich, Munich Heart Alliance

COUNTRIES

Germany, Spain

INSTRUMENT USED

BioTester

TESTING METHODS

Biaxial Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Heart Valve Tissue Engineering & MechanicsPolymers and Elastomers TestingVascular Tissue Engineering & Mechanics

Related Publications:

Instrument Used:
Year:
Testing Method:
Research Application:
Country:

Anti-CD31 antibody preconditioning for enhancement of endothelial cell capture and vascularization: a novel strategy for bioengineering lung scaffolds

Kamata S, Zargar A, et al.

Journal of Biological Engineering

BioTester

Tensile Testing

ECM & Decellularized Matrix MechanicsLung and Pleural Tissue BiomechanicsScaffold Mechanical TestingVascular Tissue Engineering & Mechanics

2026

In Vivo Evaluation of Efficacy and Safety of Oxygen-Supplemented Accelerated Scleral Cross-Linking Over Time in Young Rabbits

Ben Hilal H, Zhang J, et al.

Translational Vision Science & Technology

BioTester

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile Testing

Ophthalmic Biomechanics & Corneal Tissue Engineering

2026

Modeling mechanical and electromechanical behavior of polymers

Shah N H, Ajaj R M, et al.

Mechanics of Advanced Materials and Structures

BioTester

Biaxial TestingShear TestingTensile Testing

Electroactive and Photothermal PolymersPolymers and Elastomers TestingSoft Robotics Materials

2026

Contact Sales

Product of Interest: