The roles of sub-micron and microscale roughness on shear-driven thrombosis on titanium alloy surfaces

Artif Organs. 2023 Mar;47(3):490-501. doi: 10.1111/aor.14467. Epub 2022 Dec 3.

Abstract

Background: Continuous-flow ventricular assist devices (cfVADs) are implanted in patients with end-stage heart failure to assist with blood circulation. However, VAD implantation is associated with dangerous thrombotic complications. Our goal was to determine the impact of micron and sub-micron scale Ti6Al4V surface roughness on adherent platelet aggregate properties under clinically relevant shear rates.

Methods: We used fluorescence microscopy to visualize platelets in real time as they adhered to Ti6Al4V coupons of varying degrees of roughness, including a smooth control, in microfluidic channels and quantified deposition using an image processing algorithm. We systematically characterized roughness using spatial frequencies to generalize results for more blood-biomaterial contact applications.

Results: We observed that on the control and sub-micron rough surfaces, at 1000 s-1 , platelets adhered uniformly on the surface. At 2000 s-1 , we observed small and stably adherent platelet aggregates. At 5500 s-1 , platelet aggregates were large, unstable and interconnected via fibrillar structures. On a surface with micron-scale roughness features, at all three shear rates, platelets deposited in the troughs of the roughened surface, and formed aggregates. Thrombus height at 2000 s-1 and 5500 s-1 was greatest on the roughest surface and lowest on the mirror-finished surface, as indicated by the mean fluorescence intensity.

Conclusions: These results demonstrated that at high shear rates, thrombi form regardless of surface topography at the scales applied. At lower shear rates, micron-scale surface features cause thrombus formation, whereas submicron features result in innocuous platelet adhesion. These findings have implications for manufacturing costs and other considerations.

Keywords: Ti6Al4V; adhesion; embolism; microfluidics; platelets; surface roughness; thrombosis; ventricular assist device.

MeSH terms

  • Alloys
  • Blood Platelets
  • Humans
  • Surface Properties
  • Thrombosis*
  • Titanium* / chemistry

Substances

  • titanium alloy (TiAl6V4)
  • Titanium
  • Alloys