Volume 33, Issue 10 pp. 798-804

Improvement of Hemocompatibility in Centrifugal Blood Pump With Hydrodynamic Bearings and Semi-open Impeller: In Vitro Evaluation

Ryo Kosaka

Corresponding Author

Ryo Kosaka

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Institute for Human Science and Biomedical Engineering, Tsukuba, Ibaraki;

Dr. Ryo Kosaka, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Institute for Human Science and Biomedical Engineering, 1-2-1 Namiki Tsukuba Ibaraki 305-8564, Japan. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Osamu Maruyama

Osamu Maruyama

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Institute for Human Science and Biomedical Engineering, Tsukuba, Ibaraki;

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Masahiro Nishida

Masahiro Nishida

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Institute for Human Science and Biomedical Engineering, Tsukuba, Ibaraki;

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Toru Yada

Toru Yada

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Tokyo University of Science, Noda, Chiba; and

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Sakae Saito

Sakae Saito

U-Corporation Co., Ltd., Annaka City, Gunma, Japan

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Shusaku Hirai

Shusaku Hirai

U-Corporation Co., Ltd., Annaka City, Gunma, Japan

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Takashi Yamane

Takashi Yamane

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Institute for Human Science and Biomedical Engineering, Tsukuba, Ibaraki;

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First published: 20 October 2009
Citations: 37

Abstract

We have developed a noncontact-type centrifugal blood pump with hydrodynamic bearings and a semi-open impeller for mechanical circulatory assist. The impeller is levitated by an original spiral-groove thrust bearing and a herringbone-groove journal bearing, without any additional displacement-sensing module or additional complex control circuits. The pump was improved by optimizing the groove direction of the spiral-groove thrust bearing and the pull-up magnetic force between the rotor magnet and the stator coil against the impeller. To evaluate hemocompatibility, we conducted a levitation performance test and in vitro hemocompatibility tests by means of a mock-up circulation loop. In the hemolysis test, the normalized index of hemolysis was reduced from 0.721 to 0.0335 g/100 L corresponding to an expansion of the bearing gap from 1.1 to 56.1 µm. In the in vitro antithrombogenic test, blood pumps with a wide thrust bearing gap were effective in preventing thrombus formation. Through in vitro evaluation tests, we confirmed that hemocompatibility was improved by balancing the hydrodynamic fluid dynamics and magnetic forces.

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