PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2026

Biomechanical and Functional Response of 3D Printed Materials and Silicone Elastomers Compared to Human Aortic Tissues

Tan V, Eliathamby D, et al.

Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A

Toronto Metropolitan University, University of Toronto, University Health Network, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study benchmarked the mechanical and functional fidelity of commercially available soft 3D-printable photopolymers (Stratasys Digital Anatomy TissueMatrix series) and silicone elastomers against native human ascending aortic tissue. Square specimens (14×14 mm) from TissueMatrix myocardium, vessel-wall, and valve-leaflet formulations and silicone elastomers (hardness 0–20) were compared to inner- and outer-curvature aortic samples from 20 donors. Equibiaxial tensile tests quantified low-tangent and high-tangent moduli, and anisotropy between orthogonal directions was assessed. TissueMatrix materials exhibited substantially higher stiffness than human aorta across modulus regimes, whereas highly compliant silicone formulations produced moduli closer to native tissue at low strain. To evaluate functional behavior, adult and pediatric idealized aortic phantoms with semilunar valves were 3D printed using selected TissueMatrix wall/leaflet combinations and tested in a steady-flow mock circulation loop. Transvalvular pressure gradients increased with Reynolds number (≈3.5–6 mmHg from Re 2000–3500; up to ≈25 mmHg at Re 7000), consistent with stiffer/stenotic-like valve behavior, while printed leaflets remained intact over the tested flow conditions. Overall, the work shows current TissueMatrix formulations are mechanically stiffer than native aortic tissue despite producing functional valve motion, and highlights silicone elastomers as closer mechanical matches for vascular tissue compliance.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

BioTester

Equibiaxial tensile characterization of 3D-printed TissueMatrix samples, silicone elastomers, and native ascending aortic tissue squares was performed using a CellScale BioTester 5000. Specimens (14×14 mm) were mounted on tungsten rakes (23 N load cell, five attachment points per edge) with a 11.36 mm initial rake spacing. Samples were loaded equally in orthogonal directions to 5% engineering strain at 0.01136 cm/s. Strain was tracked from images acquired with the BioTester built-in camera using four fiducial dots on each specimen to compute elastic modulus and directional anisotropy of the materials relative to human aortic tissue.
AUTHORS

Vivian Tan, Daniella Eliathamby, Craig A. Simmons, Jennifer Chung, M. Owais Khan.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A

YEAR

2026

INSTITUTIONS

Toronto Metropolitan University, University of Toronto, University Health Network, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research

COUNTRIES

Canada

INSTRUMENT USED

BioTester

TESTING METHODS

Biaxial TestingTensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

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

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