Computational analysis of 3D-printed PLA stents revealed that only type B and type F designs met clinical deformation requirements (radial elastic recoil <6%, foreshortening <10%, dogboning <10%).
Eight representative stent architectures (computational models and fabricated PLA prototypes)
3D-printed biodegradable polylactide (PLA) cardiovascular stents fabricated via fused deposition modelling (FDM)
Mechanical performance including radial elastic recoil, foreshortening, dogboning, and radial support forcesurrogate
Specific architectures of 3D-printed biodegradable PLA stents meet clinical mechanical requirements in computational models, though manufacturing deviations highlight the need for improved fabrication fidelity.
Cardiovascular stents are widely applied in the treatment of arterial stenosis, but conventional metallic stents present limitations such as permanent implantation, hypersensitivity reactions, and late restenosis. Biodegradable polymer stents offer a promising alternative, though their translation is restricted by structural design challenges and inadequate mechanical performance. In this study, eight representative stent architectures were computationally evaluated with respect to radial elastic recoil, foreshortening, dogboning, and radial support force. Stents were fabricated from polylactide (PLA) via fused deposition modelling (FDM), and the effects of nozzle temperature, layer height, and printing speed were systematically assessed on PLA dogbone specimens to determine optimised process parameters. Computational analysis revealed that only type B and type F stents met clinical deformation requirements, with radial elastic recoil <6 %, foreshortening <10 %, and dogboning <10 %, while other designs exhibited values exceeding these thresholds. Parallel compression tests further quantified radial support capacity at 50 % compression. Fabrication and dimensional evaluation showed that, although all stent designs could be produced using optimised FDM parameters, manufacturing-induced geometric deviations at thin struts and unit connection regions were unavoidable. As a result, the finite-element simulations should be regarded as providing idealised mechanical responses for comparative design evaluation rather than exact predictions of fabricated prototypes. Overall, these findings provide structural and process design guidelines for the development of mechanically reliable 3D-printed biodegradable PLA cardiovascular stents, while emphasising the importance of manufacturing fidelity when translating computationally optimised designs into physical devices.
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Yi Huang
University of Bristol
Yan Xu
Shenzhen University
Jialu Li
University of Bristol
Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials/Journal of mechanical behavior of biomedical materials
University of Bristol
University of Nottingham
Nanyang Technological University
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Huang et al. (Thu,) conducted a other in arterial stenosis. 3D-printed biodegradable PLA cardiovascular stents vs. Different stent architectures (8 types) was evaluated on Radial elastic recoil, foreshortening, dogboning, and radial support force. Computational analysis of 3D-printed PLA stents revealed that only type B and type F designs met clinical deformation requirements (radial elastic recoil <6%, foreshortening <10%, dogboning <10%).
synapsesocial.com/papers/6980fd18c1c9540dea80ee82 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2026.107355