“…Therefore, to determine whether decellularised valves are suitable for clinical use, it is important to thoroughly assess functional performance including both the mechanical properties of the decellularised tissue and investigation of the performance of the decellularised valve under physiological flow conditions. Various test methods have been used to assess both the mechanical properties of valve tissue such as flexural (Engelmayr et al, 2005;Sacks et al, 2009b), local indentation (Cox et al, 2006), biaxial tensile (Sacks et al, 2009b;Billiar and Sacks, 2000;Fisher et al, 1986), uniaxial tensile (Luo et al, 2014;Korossis et al, 2002;Anssari-Benam et al, 2011), suture pull-out (Edwards et al, 2005;Walraevens et al, 2008), and dilation (Jennings et al, 2002;Korossis et al, 2005) as well as hydrodynamic performance of the valves under physiological flow conditions (Fisher et al, 1986;Jennings et al, 2002;Syedain et al, 2013;Reimer et al, 2015).…”