Scientific Reports (Feb 2023)

An optical coherence tomography and endothelial shear stress study of a novel bioresorbable bypass graft

  • Eric K. W. Poon,
  • Masafumi Ono,
  • Xinlei Wu,
  • Jouke Dijkstra,
  • Yu Sato,
  • Matthew Kutyna,
  • Ryo Torii,
  • Johan H. C. Reiber,
  • Christos V. Bourantas,
  • Peter Barlis,
  • Mohammed S. El-Kurdi,
  • Martijn Cox,
  • Renu Virmani,
  • Yoshinobu Onuma,
  • Patrick W. Serruys

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-29573-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Endothelial shear stress (ESS) plays a key role in the clinical outcomes in native and stented segments; however, their implications in bypass grafts and especially in a synthetic biorestorative coronary artery bypass graft are yet unclear. This report aims to examine the interplay between ESS and the morphological alterations of a biorestorative coronary bypass graft in an animal model. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation derived from the fusion of angiography and optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging was used to reconstruct data on the luminal anatomy of a bioresorbable coronary bypass graft with an endoluminal “flap” identified during OCT acquisition. The “flap” compromised the smooth lumen surface and considerably disturbed the local flow, leading to abnormally low ESS and high oscillatory shear stress (OSI) in the vicinity of the “flap”. In the presence of the catheter, the flow is more stable (median OSI 0.02384 versus 0.02635, p < 0.0001; maximum OSI 0.4612 versus 0.4837). Conversely, OSI increased as the catheter was withdrawn which can potentially cause back-and-forth motions of the “flap”, triggering tissue fatigue failure. CFD analysis in this report provided sophisticated physiological information that complements the anatomic assessment from imaging enabling a complete understanding of biorestorative graft pathophysiology.