Cargando…
Toward Development of a Higher Flow Rate Hemocompatible Biomimetic Microfluidic Blood Oxygenator
The recent emergence of microfluidic extracorporeal lung support technologies presents an opportunity to achieve high gas transfer efficiency and improved hemocompatibility relative to the current standard of care in extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). However, a critical challenge in the fi...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2021
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8398684/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34442512 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi12080888 |
_version_ | 1783744898218852352 |
---|---|
author | Santos, Jose Vedula, Else M. Lai, Weixuan Isenberg, Brett C. Lewis, Diana J. Lang, Dan Sutherland, David Roberts, Teryn R. Harea, George T. Wells, Christian Teece, Bryan Karandikar, Paramesh Urban, Joseph Risoleo, Thomas Gimbel, Alla Solt, Derek Leazer, Sahar Chung, Kevin K. Sukavaneshvar, Sivaprasad Batchinsky, Andriy I. Borenstein, Jeffrey T. |
author_facet | Santos, Jose Vedula, Else M. Lai, Weixuan Isenberg, Brett C. Lewis, Diana J. Lang, Dan Sutherland, David Roberts, Teryn R. Harea, George T. Wells, Christian Teece, Bryan Karandikar, Paramesh Urban, Joseph Risoleo, Thomas Gimbel, Alla Solt, Derek Leazer, Sahar Chung, Kevin K. Sukavaneshvar, Sivaprasad Batchinsky, Andriy I. Borenstein, Jeffrey T. |
author_sort | Santos, Jose |
collection | PubMed |
description | The recent emergence of microfluidic extracorporeal lung support technologies presents an opportunity to achieve high gas transfer efficiency and improved hemocompatibility relative to the current standard of care in extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). However, a critical challenge in the field is the ability to scale these devices to clinically relevant blood flow rates, in part because the typically very low blood flow in a single layer of a microfluidic oxygenator device requires stacking of a logistically challenging number of layers. We have developed biomimetic microfluidic oxygenators for the past decade and report here on the development of a high-flow (30 mL/min) single-layer prototype, scalable to larger structures via stacking and assembly with blood distribution manifolds. Microfluidic oxygenators were designed with biomimetic in-layer blood distribution manifolds and arrays of parallel transfer channels, and were fabricated using high precision machined durable metal master molds and microreplication with silicone films, resulting in large area gas transfer devices. Oxygen transfer was evaluated by flowing 100% O(2) at 100 mL/min and blood at 0–30 mL/min while monitoring increases in O(2) partial pressures in the blood. This design resulted in an oxygen saturation increase from 65% to 95% at 20 mL/min and operation up to 30 mL/min in multiple devices, the highest value yet recorded in a single layer microfluidic device. In addition to evaluation of the device for blood oxygenation, a 6-h in vitro hemocompatibility test was conducted on devices (n = 5) at a 25 mL/min blood flow rate with heparinized swine donor blood against control circuits (n = 3). Initial hemocompatibility results indicate that this technology has the potential to benefit future applications in extracorporeal lung support technologies for acute lung injury. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8398684 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | MDPI |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-83986842021-08-29 Toward Development of a Higher Flow Rate Hemocompatible Biomimetic Microfluidic Blood Oxygenator Santos, Jose Vedula, Else M. Lai, Weixuan Isenberg, Brett C. Lewis, Diana J. Lang, Dan Sutherland, David Roberts, Teryn R. Harea, George T. Wells, Christian Teece, Bryan Karandikar, Paramesh Urban, Joseph Risoleo, Thomas Gimbel, Alla Solt, Derek Leazer, Sahar Chung, Kevin K. Sukavaneshvar, Sivaprasad Batchinsky, Andriy I. Borenstein, Jeffrey T. Micromachines (Basel) Article The recent emergence of microfluidic extracorporeal lung support technologies presents an opportunity to achieve high gas transfer efficiency and improved hemocompatibility relative to the current standard of care in extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). However, a critical challenge in the field is the ability to scale these devices to clinically relevant blood flow rates, in part because the typically very low blood flow in a single layer of a microfluidic oxygenator device requires stacking of a logistically challenging number of layers. We have developed biomimetic microfluidic oxygenators for the past decade and report here on the development of a high-flow (30 mL/min) single-layer prototype, scalable to larger structures via stacking and assembly with blood distribution manifolds. Microfluidic oxygenators were designed with biomimetic in-layer blood distribution manifolds and arrays of parallel transfer channels, and were fabricated using high precision machined durable metal master molds and microreplication with silicone films, resulting in large area gas transfer devices. Oxygen transfer was evaluated by flowing 100% O(2) at 100 mL/min and blood at 0–30 mL/min while monitoring increases in O(2) partial pressures in the blood. This design resulted in an oxygen saturation increase from 65% to 95% at 20 mL/min and operation up to 30 mL/min in multiple devices, the highest value yet recorded in a single layer microfluidic device. In addition to evaluation of the device for blood oxygenation, a 6-h in vitro hemocompatibility test was conducted on devices (n = 5) at a 25 mL/min blood flow rate with heparinized swine donor blood against control circuits (n = 3). Initial hemocompatibility results indicate that this technology has the potential to benefit future applications in extracorporeal lung support technologies for acute lung injury. MDPI 2021-07-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8398684/ /pubmed/34442512 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi12080888 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Article Santos, Jose Vedula, Else M. Lai, Weixuan Isenberg, Brett C. Lewis, Diana J. Lang, Dan Sutherland, David Roberts, Teryn R. Harea, George T. Wells, Christian Teece, Bryan Karandikar, Paramesh Urban, Joseph Risoleo, Thomas Gimbel, Alla Solt, Derek Leazer, Sahar Chung, Kevin K. Sukavaneshvar, Sivaprasad Batchinsky, Andriy I. Borenstein, Jeffrey T. Toward Development of a Higher Flow Rate Hemocompatible Biomimetic Microfluidic Blood Oxygenator |
title | Toward Development of a Higher Flow Rate Hemocompatible Biomimetic Microfluidic Blood Oxygenator |
title_full | Toward Development of a Higher Flow Rate Hemocompatible Biomimetic Microfluidic Blood Oxygenator |
title_fullStr | Toward Development of a Higher Flow Rate Hemocompatible Biomimetic Microfluidic Blood Oxygenator |
title_full_unstemmed | Toward Development of a Higher Flow Rate Hemocompatible Biomimetic Microfluidic Blood Oxygenator |
title_short | Toward Development of a Higher Flow Rate Hemocompatible Biomimetic Microfluidic Blood Oxygenator |
title_sort | toward development of a higher flow rate hemocompatible biomimetic microfluidic blood oxygenator |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8398684/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34442512 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi12080888 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT santosjose towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT vedulaelsem towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT laiweixuan towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT isenbergbrettc towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT lewisdianaj towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT langdan towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT sutherlanddavid towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT robertsterynr towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT hareageorget towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT wellschristian towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT teecebryan towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT karandikarparamesh towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT urbanjoseph towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT risoleothomas towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT gimbelalla towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT soltderek towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT leazersahar towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT chungkevink towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT sukavaneshvarsivaprasad towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT batchinskyandriyi towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator AT borensteinjeffreyt towarddevelopmentofahigherflowratehemocompatiblebiomimeticmicrofluidicbloodoxygenator |