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Jonathan P. Vande Geest

Jonathan P. Vande Geest

Verified

University of Arizona · Software Engineering

Active 2002–2024

h-index28
Citations3.7k
Papers14226 last 5y
Funding$11.6M2 active
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Research topics

  • Physics
  • Medicine
  • Mechanics
  • Composite material
  • Biomedical engineering
  • Chemistry
  • Surgery
  • Internal medicine
  • Materials science

Selected publications

  • Optimizing the Porohyperelastic Response of a Layered Compliance Matched Vascular Graft to Promote Luminal Self-Cleaning

    Journal of Biomechanical Engineering · 2022 · 2 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Materials science
    • Biomedical engineering
    • Composite material

    Thrombosis and intimal hyperplasia have remained the major failure mechanisms of small-diameter vascular grafts used in bypass procedures. While most efforts to reduce thrombogenicity have used a biochemical surface modification approach, the use of local mechanical phenomena to aid in this goal has received somewhat less attention. In this work, the mechanical, fluid transport, and geometrical properties of a layered and porous vascular graft are optimized within a porohyperelastic finite element framework to maximize self-cleaning via luminal reversal fluid velocity (into the lumen). This is expected to repel platelets as well as inhibit the formation of and/or destabilize adsorbed protein layers thereby reducing thrombogenic potential. A particle swarm optimization algorithm was utilized to maximize luminal reversal fluid velocity while also compliance matching our graft to a target artery (rat aorta). The maximum achievable luminal reversal fluid velocity was approximately 246 μm/s without simultaneously optimizing for host compliance. Simultaneous optimization of reversal flow and compliance resulted in a luminal reversal fluid velocity of 59 μm/s. Results indicate that a thick highly permeable compressible inner layer and a thin low permeability incompressible outer layer promote intraluminal reversal fluid velocity. Future research is needed to determine the feasibility of fabricating such a layered and optimized graft and verify its ability to improve hemocompatibility.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • B. R. Simon

    University of Arizona

    27 shared
  • William R. Wagner

    University of Alabama at Birmingham

    26 shared
  • Urs Utzinger

    24 shared
  • David A. Vorp

    McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine

    23 shared
  • Joseph T. Keyes

    17 shared
  • Hirut G. Kollech

    University of Pittsburgh

    13 shared
  • Avinash Ayyalasomayajula

    University of Arizona

    12 shared
  • Ehab Tamimi

    12 shared
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