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If heart valves don’t close properly, they are replaced. Conventional treatment of venous valve failure, however, has up to now always and exclusively been via medication. In future, an implant will assume the function of damaged valves. In close collaboration with other partners researchers from the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA in Stuttgart developed an automated production facility that can make venous valve prostheses from polycarbonate-urethane (PCU), a plastic.
It’s one of the most commonly occurring medical conditions – chronic venous in-sufficiency (CVI). Almost ten million German citizens suffer from weak veins that require treatment, with twice as many women being affected as men. The cause of this widespread condition is restricted functioning of the venous valves in the legs. If the venous valve is no longer able to close properly, blood will observe the laws of gravity in between heartbeats and flow down to collect in the legs. This leads to edemas, and can cause open ulcers in particularly severe cases.
CVI is usually treated with anti-inflammatory drugs and diuretics; as yet there is no globally available venous valve implant that can be used to treat the illness. This is something that researchers from the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA in Stuttgart are setting out to change: In close collaboration with four industrial partners and Helmholtz-Institute for Biomedical Engineering of RWTH Aachen University, they have developed an automated production facility that can make venous valve prostheses from polycarbonate-urethane (PCU), a plastic. The project was sponsored by the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology BMWI.
The centerpiece of the facility is a 3D droplet dispensing tool which enables the researchers to precisely apply a particular polymer onto freeform surfaces and at the same time combine various grades of polymer hardness, called Shore hardnesses. “3D droplet dispensing technology is an additive procedure that allows three-dimensional geometries to be created layer by layer using a polymer”, explains Dr. Oliver Schwarz, group manager at the IPA. The scientists use PCU because it is particularly strong and flexible, while another useful property of the material is that it is easy to sew into surrounding tissue. PCU structures can be made in very thin layers, which is ideal when replacing wafer-thin atrioventricular valves. “By using PCU in combination with our 3D dispensing kinematics, we can achieve seamless transitions within the material between six different grades of elasticity and hardness – without any breaking points whatsoever. This technique mirrors the design of highly stressed structures in nature. It can’t be done using injection molding”, says Schwarz.

Further Information:
Dr. rer. nat. Oliver Schwarz
Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA
Nobelstr. 12
70569 Stuttgart, Germany
Phone: +49 711/ 970 - 3754
Fax: +49 711/ 970 - 953 754
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