Design and In Vitro Evaluation of an Artificial Placenta Made From Hollow Fiber Membranes
For infants born at the border of viability, care practices and morbimortality rates vary widely between centers. Trends show significant improvement, however, with increasing gestational age and weight. For periviable infants, the goal of critical care is to bridge patients to improved outcomes. Cu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | ASAIO journal (1992) 2023-02, Vol.69 (2), p.e86-e92 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | For infants born at the border of viability, care practices and morbimortality rates vary widely between centers. Trends show significant improvement, however, with increasing gestational age and weight. For periviable infants, the goal of critical care is to bridge patients to improved outcomes. Current practice involves ventilator therapy, resulting in chronic lung injuries. Research has turned to artificial uterine environments, where infants are submerged in an artificial amniotic fluid bath and provided respiratory assistance
via
an artificial placenta. We have developed the Preemie-Ox, a hollow fiber membrane bundle that provides pumpless respiratory support
via
umbilical cord cannulation. Computational fluid dynamics was used to design an oxygenator that could achieve a carbon dioxide removal rate of 12.2 ml/min, an outlet hemoglobin saturation of 100%, and a resistance of less than 71 mmHg/L/min at a blood flow rate of 165 ml/min. A prototype was utilized to evaluate
in-vitro
gas exchange, resistance, and plasma-free hemoglobin generation.
In-vitro
gas exchange was 4% higher than predicted results and no quantifiable plasma-free hemoglobin was produced. |
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ISSN: | 1058-2916 1538-943X |
DOI: | 10.1097/MAT.0000000000001862 |