Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong.
Phys Med Biol. 2020 Apr 27;65(8):085006. doi: 10.1088/1361-6560/ab7abf.
The geometry and stiffness of a vessel are pertinent to blood dynamics and vessel wall mechanical behavior and may alter in diseased conditions. Ultrasound-based ultrafast Doppler (uDoppler) imaging and shear wave imaging (SWI) techniques have been extensively exploited for the assessment of vascular hemodynamics and mechanics. Their performance is conventionally validated on vessel-mimicking phantoms (VMPs) prior to their clinical use. Compared with commercial ones, customized VMPs are favored for research use because of their wider range of material properties, more complex lumen geometries, or wall structures. Fused deposition modeling (FDM) 3D printing technique with plastic filaments is a promising method for making VMPs with a complex vessel lumen. However, it may require a toxic solvent or a long dissolution time currently. In this paper, we present a safe, efficient and geometrically flexible method where FDM 3D printing with a water-soluble polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) filament is exploited to fabricate a walled three-branch VMP (VMP-I). As a key step in fabrication, to avoid dissolution of the PVA-printed vessel core by the solution of the tissue-mimicking material, paraffin wax was used for isolation. Paraffin wax is easy to coat (i.e. without any special equipment), of satisfactory thickness (∼0.1 mm), chemically stable, and easy to remove after fabrication, thus making the proposed method practicable for ultrasound imaging studies. VMP-I was examined by B-mode imaging and power Doppler imaging (PDI) to verify complete dissolution of PVA-printed vessel core in its lumen, confirming good fabrication quality. The flow velocities in VMP-I were estimated by uDoppler imaging with a -0.8% difference, and the shear wave propagation speeds for the same phantom were estimated by SWI with a -6.03% difference when compared with fluid-structure interaction (FSI) simulation results. A wall-less VMP of a scaled and simplified coronary arterial network (VMP-II) was additionally fabricated and examined to test the capability of the proposed method for a complex lumen geometry. The proposed fabrication method for customized VMPs is foreseen to facilitate the development of ultrasound imaging techniques for blood vessels.
血管的几何形状和刚度与血液动力学和血管壁力学有关,并且在病变条件下可能会发生改变。基于超声的超快多普勒(uDoppler)成像和剪切波成像(SWI)技术已广泛用于评估血管的血液动力学和力学特性。在临床使用之前,通常会在血管模拟体(VMP)上验证其性能。与商业产品相比,由于具有更广泛的材料特性、更复杂的管腔几何形状或壁结构,定制的 VMP 更适合研究使用。使用塑料细丝的熔融沉积建模(FDM)3D 打印技术是一种制造具有复杂血管管腔的 VMP 的有前途的方法。然而,目前它可能需要使用有毒溶剂或较长的溶解时间。在本文中,我们提出了一种安全、高效且具有几何灵活性的方法,即利用水溶性聚乙烯醇(PVA)细丝进行 FDM 3D 打印来制造具有壁的三分支 VMP(VMP-I)。作为制造过程中的关键步骤,为了避免组织模拟材料的溶液溶解 PVA 打印的血管核心,使用石蜡进行隔离。石蜡易于涂覆(即无需任何特殊设备),厚度令人满意(约 0.1 毫米),化学性质稳定,制造后易于去除,因此使得该方法可用于超声成像研究。通过 B 模式成像和功率多普勒成像(PDI)检查 VMP-I,以验证 PVA 打印的血管核心在其管腔中完全溶解,从而确认良好的制造质量。通过 uDoppler 成像估计 VMP-I 中的流速,与流体结构相互作用(FSI)模拟结果相比,通过 SWI 估计相同的幻影的剪切波传播速度的差异为-6.03%。还制造和检查了简化的冠状动脉网络的无壁 VMP(VMP-II),以测试所提出的方法用于复杂管腔几何形状的能力。预计用于定制 VMP 的这种制造方法将促进用于血管的超声成像技术的发展。