Development of a Murine Perfusion System

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Development of a Murine Perfusion System Nicola Asgill Fredrick Hilliard George Kittos

description

Development of a Murine Perfusion System. Nicola Asgill Fredrick Hilliard George Kittos. Objectives. Langendorff perfusion system Requirements: Miniature scale Fluid temperature controlled Inter-changeable components Drug introduction into perfusate. Background. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Development of a Murine Perfusion System

Page 1: Development of a Murine Perfusion System

Development of a Murine Perfusion SystemNicola Asgill

Fredrick Hilliard

George Kittos

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Objectives

Langendorff perfusion systemRequirements:

Miniature scale Fluid temperature controlled Inter-changeable components Drug introduction into perfusate

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Background

Langendorff Perfusion SystemSimulates natural blood flowRetrograde fluid flow

Attached to aorta

Examine effects of drug on heart

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Considerations for project

Why will this work? Controlled temperature, flow rate and pressure

Improvement of heat stability Multi-drug delivery capability

Disposable components

Why is this important? Possible testing applications:

Drug delivery Cardiac cell response

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Prototype

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Prototype Modifications for Preliminary Testing Flow will be gravity controlled

Removal of Peristaltic Pump

Removal of Flow Sensor

Pump and Sensor will be added based on results of preliminary testing

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Peltier Element

Max Current 7.6A

Max Power 76 W

Max Voltage 16.3 V

dT Max 72°C

Dimensions 48x48x4.8mm3

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Peltier Element Test

GoalsShow functionality – Heating capabilitiesCalculate Time Constant

To heat from room temperature to 37 ± 1°C

Determine appropriate input voltage

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Peltier Element Test Conclusion:

Input Voltage of 8V – longer time to heat sample, needs to be faster to perfusate at constant temp.

Input Voltage of 15V – faster heating, but found that this voltage will cause the device to fail.

Input Voltage of 12V – faster heating and the device did not malfunction

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LabVIEW Temperature Control

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Transparent Glass Chamber

Plexiglass

Visualize electric activity in heart using dyes

Staggered holes

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Transparent Glass Chamber

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Current Work Heating Perfusate to 37 ± 1°C

Manufacturing Plexiglass chamber

Verify and Validate the LabView Module for controlling and maintaining constant temperature

Tygon Tubing

Peltier Element

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Future Work

Acquiring additional components

Assembling Prototype

Testing the perfusate heating apparatus

Design and Test Control Valve System

Harvesting the Mouse Heart

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Thanks

Questions?