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Frequency Dependent Radial Compliance of Latex Tubing
Biomedical Science Instrumentation, 33, pp. 524-529, (1997)

J.C. CONTI,1 E.R. Strope, D.J. Rohde, L.D. Spence

Dynatek Dalta Scientific Instruments
PO Box 254, Galena, MO 65656

1 Department of Physics and Astronomy, Southwest Missouri State University

Keywords

Compliance, latex, tubing, mechanical, grafts, stent, artery, frequency, radial, testing

Abstract

Custom latex tubing is often used in medical device evaluation. Examples include thin-walled devices used to reduce leakage of porous vascular grafts, and thicker-walled prototypes used as mechanically equivalent synthetic arteries. Medical devices such as stents and balloons are introduced into these for mechanically comparable in vitro testing. The three-dimensional mechanical properties of these tubes are critically important, particularly in accelerated testing, since they are primarily designed to replicate the mechanical rather than biological properties of in vivo arteries.

This paper explores the instrumentation and protocols necessary to evaluate the frequency dependent radial compliance of precision built latex tubing. Five cm long samples of custom dipped latex tubing 6mm in saline for 48 or 96 hours before being mounted on a dynamic internal compliance tester. Each tube was tested initially at 70bpm to establish the internal radial compliance at the physiologically relevant rate. The frequency of the test was then increased incrementally and the radial compliance re-checked. In the most extreme case, tubes were tested up to 2700bpm. In each case, the volume, pressure, and length of the tube were monitored continuously.

The results show a complicated relationship between testing frequency and radial compliance.

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Abstract
Rocky Mountain Bioengineering Symposium, 1997 Annual Conference
Presented by James C. Conti
DCT

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