"That was the best process when it came to the stents because of the geometric accuracy," Lathabai says. The strut diameters for these stents can be as small as 100 microns, making these "ultrafine" structures considering that metal powder for AM typically falls in the range of 15 to 45 microns in diameter.
"The nickel has a low vapor pressure compared to titanium, and it can actually vaporize under the laser," Lathabai says. "If you lose that nickel and change that nickel-titanium proportion, your transformation temperatures change completely."
"The design freedom offered by additive manufacturing should enable the customization of the nitinol stents to specific vessel diameters, but can also accommodate larger sized stents, cross branches and new shapes for proximal and distal vessels," Lathabai says. "This also opens up the opportunity to do other things that you can't with conventional laser cutting, like bifurcated stents. The normal procedure is to put in two different stents that have to match up and be covered properly, but by 3D printing we can actually build a bifurcated device in one piece."
"Thus far, we have only done a limited amount of mechanical properties and durability testing," Lathabai says, but adds, "We have shown that our 3D printed stents are as flexible and corrosion-resistant in simulated body fluids as commercial stents of similar dimensions."