Triboelectric charging of polytetrafluoroethylene antithrombotic catheters.


Journal

Journal of artificial organs : the official journal of the Japanese Society for Artificial Organs
ISSN: 1619-0904
Titre abrégé: J Artif Organs
Pays: Japan
ID NLM: 9815648

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Dec 2019
Historique:
received: 10 04 2019
accepted: 20 07 2019
pubmed: 3 8 2019
medline: 25 2 2020
entrez: 3 8 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

This study proposes that a polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) electret tube charged by frictional electricity can prevent the solidification of the indwelling catheter in blood vessels. Coagulation in intravascular indwelling catheters may discontinue the treatment because of thrombus-derived bacteria-adhesion infections or poor blood removal. Current commercially available intravascular catheters lack complete antithrombotic measures, even with heparin or urokinase antithrombotic coatings. Herein, we tested the effectiveness of an antithrombotic treatment that prevents coagulation using a static electric charge on the interior of the PTFE tube via the triboelectric effect by rubbing the tube's inner wall with a round glass rod. The anticoagulation properties were evaluated by enclosing a sample of blood in an electret tube and observing the coagulase adhering to the inner wall using a microscope. To confirm the effectiveness of this treatment, the charge-distribution on the inner surface of the electret tube was measured, surface irregularities were observed, and the elements on the surface were analyzed. The surface potential inside the electret tube was - 366.4 V, which proved effective for an antithrombotic treatment, as it discouraged coagulation, and the triboelectric charging process caused neither surface element denaturation nor significant surface irregularities. The nearly uniform negative surface charge on the inside of the tube was responsible for the antithrombotic effect because no surface irregularities or change in the surface element denaturation was observed. Triboelectrically charged PTFE electret tubes are highly useful for intravascular indwelling catheters.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31372775
doi: 10.1007/s10047-019-01122-6
pii: 10.1007/s10047-019-01122-6
doi:

Substances chimiques

Fibrinolytic Agents 0
Polytetrafluoroethylene 9002-84-0
Heparin 9005-49-6

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

300-306

Références

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Auteurs

Minoru Ogino (M)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan. oginomnr@stf.teu.ac.jp.

Kiyoshi Naemura (K)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Satoshi Sasaki (S)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Junko Minami (J)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Takashi Kano (T)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Nana Ito (N)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Ryosuke Kasai (R)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Fuminori Kamijyo (F)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Naoki Kusumoto (N)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Kazuya Akimoto (K)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Kohei Tanaka (K)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Kazuhiko Shinohara (K)

School of Health Sciences, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

Kenji Yokoyama (K)

School of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Tokyo University of Technology, 5-23-22 Nishikamata Ota-ku, Tokyo, 144-8535, Japan.

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Classifications MeSH