TY - JOUR
T1 - Endovascular repair of aortic dissection with a bioresorbable patch
T2 - Computational and experimental study
AU - Bracco, Marta I.
AU - Canalejo-Codina, Francesc
AU - Giuliodori, Agustina
AU - Montanino, Andrea
AU - Aranda, Alejandro
AU - Martorell, Jordi
AU - Soudah, Eduardo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors.
PY - 2026/3
Y1 - 2026/3
N2 - This study introduces an experimentally-calibrated finite-element framework to predict the endovascular sealing performance of a bioresorbable patch for aortic dissection repair. The patch–aortic wall interaction was modeled using an adhesion-enabled contact formulation, with parameters derived from a custom dye-penetration test to replicate in-vivo tissue adhesion. A parametric analysis assessed the impact of tear size (10–20 mm), tear morphology (round vs. circumferential ellipse), and deployment angle (5°–20°) on patch sealing efficiency, wall compliance, and local stress distribution under physiological loading. Tear geometry was identified as the dominant determinant of sealing: large round tears reduced effective apposition, while circumferential elliptical tears promoted full wall coupling at lower deployment forces. Increasing deployment angle raised insertion forces and impaired circumferential contact. Importantly, pulsatile hemodynamic loading demonstrated that the patch preserved native wall compliance without inducing adverse stress concentrations. By integrating experimental calibration with computational modeling, this framework offers a quantitative tool to evaluate anatomical and procedural factors influencing endovascular sealing. These insights may support the design optimization and clinical translation of resorbable patch-based strategies for aortic dissection repair.
AB - This study introduces an experimentally-calibrated finite-element framework to predict the endovascular sealing performance of a bioresorbable patch for aortic dissection repair. The patch–aortic wall interaction was modeled using an adhesion-enabled contact formulation, with parameters derived from a custom dye-penetration test to replicate in-vivo tissue adhesion. A parametric analysis assessed the impact of tear size (10–20 mm), tear morphology (round vs. circumferential ellipse), and deployment angle (5°–20°) on patch sealing efficiency, wall compliance, and local stress distribution under physiological loading. Tear geometry was identified as the dominant determinant of sealing: large round tears reduced effective apposition, while circumferential elliptical tears promoted full wall coupling at lower deployment forces. Increasing deployment angle raised insertion forces and impaired circumferential contact. Importantly, pulsatile hemodynamic loading demonstrated that the patch preserved native wall compliance without inducing adverse stress concentrations. By integrating experimental calibration with computational modeling, this framework offers a quantitative tool to evaluate anatomical and procedural factors influencing endovascular sealing. These insights may support the design optimization and clinical translation of resorbable patch-based strategies for aortic dissection repair.
KW - Aortic dissection
KW - Aortic tear sealing
KW - Contact model
KW - Endovascular technique
KW - Finite element method
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105023904359
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=pure_univeritat_ramon_llull&SrcAuth=WosAPI&KeyUT=WOS:001635144000001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS_CPL
U2 - 10.1016/j.apples.2025.100277
DO - 10.1016/j.apples.2025.100277
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105023904359
SN - 2666-4968
VL - 25
JO - Applications in Engineering Science
JF - Applications in Engineering Science
M1 - 100277
ER -