COMPARATIVE STUDY
JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, P.H.S.
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Significant safety advantages gained with an improved pressure-regulated blood pump.

A prototype of a non-occlusive pressure-regulated blood pump (M-pump) was evaluated in-vitro for safety in a comparative study with the roller and centrifugal pumps. The M-pump consists of collapsible tubing of unique design wrapped under tension around a rotor without a stator. The prototype M-pumps were tested in vitro to evaluate performance with respect to flow/ pressure characteristics, hemolysis, bubble generation (cavitation) and durability. The M-pump and centrifugal pump did not overpressurize at any RPM when the pump outlet was occluded, but the roller pump reached pressures in excess of 1000 mmHg. The M-pump did not generate negative pressures upon occlusion of the inlet, whereas the roller and centrifugal pumps produced near-vacuum pressures. Furthermore, the M-pump was unable to empty a blood reservoir when the height of the pump inlet was placed slightly above the reservoir outlet. The levels of microbubbles in the M-pump were significantly lower than the roller and centrifugal pumps upon sudden restriction of the pump inlet as determined with an ultrasonic bubble detector. The results of our in-vitro evaluation of the M-pump have shown it to have lower hemolysis than the centrifugal pump and lower or comparable hemolysis to roller pumps at flowrates of 0.1, 0.5, 4.0 and 6 L/min. We determined that the M-pump design possesses important safety advantages over roller and centrifugal pumps for cardiopulmonary bypass applications.

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