Peter Dornier Foundation Prize 2022 honours textile research on woven heart valve
The human heart is a
high-performance machine: over the course of a person's life, it beats almost
three billion times, pumping around 200 million litres of blood through the
body. Enormous stresses that can sometimes lead to life-threatening signs of
wear and tear. If a heart valve gets out of step, patients usually get
artificial-mechanical or biological valves as a replacement. However,
mechanical solutions imply patients to take blood-thinning medication for the
rest of their lives. In addition, there may be audible closing noises. For example,
almost a quarter of patients with mechanical heart valves complain of sleep
disturbances. Biological heart valves, on the other hand, such as those made
from animal tissue, require a great deal of manual work and have a shorter
lifetime.
Potential of weaving
for medical products demonstrated
For this reason, Graduate Engineer Mathis Bruns at the Institute for Textile
Machinery and High-Performance Textile Materials Technology (ITM) at the TU
Dresden is researching an implant alternative made of fabric. As part of a
research project that also involved heart surgeons from the Dresden Heart
Centre and the University Hospital in Würzburg, Mr. Bruns provided important
findings for weaving an artificial heart valve in his diploma thesis. For his
work entitled "Development of tubular structures with integrated valve
function", Mathis Bruns has now received the Peter Dornier Foundation
Prize 2022, endowed with 5,000 euros. In his laudation, Dr. Adnan Wahhoud,
curator for the textile technology, said: "With his work, the winner of
the award demonstrates very clearly the potential of weaving technology to
produce fabrics of complex form, geometry and structure with the aim of
prolonging and improving people's lives." The award-winning thesis
enriches research into three-dimensional tissues for use in medicine.
Weaving replacement
heart valves without seams
"A particular advantage of our approach is the integral production
method", says foundation prize winner Mathis Bruns. “The geometry and
function of a heart valve is that complex that woven heart valves could not be
produced in this form previously. Through the combined use of a narrow fabric
weaving loom with bobbin shuttle and a Jacquard machine, it is possible to
weave the replacement heart valve in such a way that it no longer requires
being sewn together. Even the tubular structures for the blood vessels and the
integrated valve function are ‘all of one piece’. Seams are always a weak point
in textile medical products," Mr. Bruns adds. “Another advantage of the
woven heart valve is the possibility to insert it by the help of minimally
invasive surgery. Hence, the folded valve which is about the size of a tea
light is to be pushed with a catheter via the bloodstream to the target
position in the heart and unfolded there. The patient's chest and heart would
then no longer have to be cut open”, explains prize winner Mr. Bruns.
Textile structure is
similar to human tissue
A wide variety of medical products have always been produced on DORNIER weaving
machines. Customers use them to produce fabrics for bandages, prostheses, blood
filters and orthoses among other things. For Mathis Bruns, it is only evident
that implants such as heart valves will more and more be woven on the machines
from Lindau in the future. "Textile tissue is very similar to human
tissue," he says. The human body consists largely of thread-like
materials, just as a textile fabric is made up of thousands of individual
threads. "Muscle fibres convey force impulses, nerve tracts send stimuli
such as pain and brain cells convey information via thread-like dendrites and
axons." Because of their ‘thread-like properties’, woven implants are
therefore particularly suitable for medical applications.
Foundation purposes
medical research and hospice
Maja Dornier, Chairwoman of the Peter Dornier Foundation, also honoured the
research achievement between medicine and weaving innovation. At the award
ceremony in the Lindau DORNIER "Weaving Technology Centre" in front
of around 85 guests she said, "The results of Mr. Bruns' thesis could be
the basis for significantly improved medical care for people with insufficient
heart valve function. The work therefore represents a great medical and social
step forward.”
Since 2021, the prize
is awarded annually to young people for excellent scientific work in the fields
of textile technology, film stretching technology and composites as well as
aviation. The Peter Dornier Foundation Prize was the idea of Peter Dornier
(1917-2002), founder of Lindauer DORNIER GmbH, who accomplished great things in
these areas of life and work over decades. Funding for medical research is just
as much a part of the aims of the Peter Dornier Foundation's as the promotion
of hospice facilities for a self-determined and dignified life until the end.
The property, complete with 30-seat screening from room, a 100-seat amphitheater and a swimming pond with sandy shower…
The property, complete with 30-seat screening from room, a 100-seat amphitheater and a swimming pond with sandy shower…
The property, complete with 30-seat screening from room, a 100-seat amphitheater and a swimming pond with sandy shower…
The property, complete with 30-seat screening from room, a 100-seat amphitheater and a swimming pond with sandy shower…
The property, complete with 30-seat screening from room, a 100-seat amphitheater and a swimming pond with sandy shower…
We’ve invested every aspect of how we serve our users over the past Pellentesque rutrum ante in nulla suscipit, vel posuere leo tristique.
We’ve invested every aspect of how we serve our users over the past Pellentesque rutrum ante in nulla suscipit, vel posuere leo tristique.
We’ve invested every aspect of how we serve our users over the past Pellentesque rutrum ante in nulla suscipit, vel posuere leo tristique.
We’ve invested every aspect of how we serve our users over the past Pellentesque rutrum ante in nulla suscipit, vel posuere leo tristique.