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China Suzhou Haichuan Rare Metal Products Co., Ltd. Company Cases

Successful Case of Nitinol Wire Used in Medical Devices

Nitinol is a nickel-titanium alloy distinguished from other materials by its shape memory and superelastic characteristics. The term “shape memory” describes the phenomenon of "remembering" its original shape and that returns to its pre-deformed shape when heated. The superelasticity refers to the enormous elasticity of the alloys, which can be 10 times greater than the best stainless steels used in medicine today. The superelastic quality of Nitinol, along with its biocompatibility, makes it ideal for making many types of medical devices that are implanted in the body. An application familiar to many of us is the stent, a device that supports blood vessels and keeps them open. Nitinol’s superelasticity allows a medical device, such as a stent or a heart valve, to be compressed into a shape that fits inside a catheter. The catheter is positioned at the correct location in the body, the device is released, and it returns to its original shape. One customer of SuZhou HaiChuan Metals was developing a medical device made by nitinol wire. Members of the research team were developing a special device that went into the patients’ esophagus - the device would include a ball end to avoid scratching the esophagus and a curve shape design bending to one side away from the heart for protection purpose. On the other end was a plastic hook serving as a handle for the doctor to hold on.   Since the device is used in the human body, impurities must be avoided and welding between each part should be reduced to minimum or none or avoided (the original design of the head ball was welded to one end of the wire). After the customers posed the above requirements of the medical device they were trying to design and put into medical practice, engineers at HC soon put together our proposal to achieve the goal. The biggest challenge - allowing the wire to go into the patient’s mouth in a small size but soon expand to wire in the patient's body was solved through the use of nitinol materials. engineers proposed to store the “shape memory wire” in ice water to lock the small shape, once the wire goes into the human body and encounters heat in the esophagus (around 37 degrees), it will slowly restore the expand its shape back to the original design. To our client’s delightment, engineers at HaiChuan paid special attention to details and proposed to melt the wire into the ball end to avoid incidents of the ball dropping in the patient’s body when in use. Here is a picture of the melted ball by the wire end:
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