This
is an embroidered stent, as used for the repair of abdominal aortic
aneurysms. The picture shows how much it can be twisted, without the lumen becoming
closed.
Embroidery Technology is not exactly new. Hand embroidery has been used for decorating
textiles for thousands of years; even automatic embroidery machinery has been in use for
over a 150 years. The only thing that is really new is its application to surgical
implants, which has been developed within the last few years.
Textile surgical implants have, until now, been constrained by the use
of the traditional methods of knitting, weaving or braiding to make fibre assemblies.
However, weaving usually limits the designer to placing fibres interlaced at right angles
to one another, knitting forms the fabrics in loops which are generally dimensionally
unstable, and braiding confines the designer to usually narrow structures made in a
process similar to plaiting hair.
Embroidery is the formation of stitches on a base cloth, it being
possible to place the stitches in any position. The base cloth can be dissolved away after
the stitching process has been carried out, and, assuming appropriate design features have
been incorporated, the structure holds securely together as a stable entity. When making
technical textiles, one is usually interested in structure rather than appearance and
since fibres can be placed in any orientation in the plane of the base cloth, endless
possibilities arise, especially mimicking natural fibrous arrays such as natural
ligaments. For example, the fibres in a particular ligament may fan out from a bundle 3mm
wide to an array 20mm across, a design feature which is easy to reproduce with textile
fibres using embroidery technology. Another example could be a fracture fixation device
which has load bearing threads arranged optimally to fit the part of the body where it is
to be used and with open mesh parts which allows tissue ingrowth and consequent
incorporation into the body.
The colour change facility of the machine can be used to alter the
components in various parts of the implant as it is being manufactured and allows
the automated incorporation of attachment parts and other features very easily.
Modern embroidery uses sophisticated (and expensive) software dedicated
to the quick and easy production of designs for the decoration of garments. Modifications
to the use of this software allow fibre arrays to be designed for use as surgical implants
with similar facility. This leads to the possibility of customised implants for individual
patients. By way of example, we have taken a rough sketch of a component from a surgeon
and converted it into an embroidery design, e-mailed it to Pearsalls Limited in Taunton, Somerset, and moved
from concept to manufactured product in less than three hours . The potential, even for
specialist trauma surgery, is very exciting.
We have proved the general concept of using embroidery for surgical
implants in a MedLINK project, which developed a device for the endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms. Although up to 1900 different size
combinations are required to treat all the patients likely to be seen by a surgeon,
special software now allows us to take the dimensions of an aneurysm provided by the
surgeon from CT Scans and produce a customised embroidery design within seconds, and
commence manufacturing within minutes. The device has significantly improved
characteristics when compared with most other available devices. It is currently being
prepared for market by Anson Medical Limited of
Didcot.
Other work is being carried out to develop a range of orthopaedic
implants for a diverse range of end users. All the devices in advanced stage of
development at the moment are mainly constructed of polyester suture thread. One of the
reasons for this is that the use of threads produced specifically for surgical
applications raises no questions for surgeons about suitability for well designed
implants: their behaviour and properties in the body are well documented. However, we are
rapidly moving towards the use of advanced materials and structures and the development of
active implants. The future is very encouraging and it is hoped that the technology will
help in producing the framework for organs using the patients own cultured tissue which
will replace diseased and damaged parts without the problems currently associated with
transplant surgery.