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1.
Ann Biomed Eng ; 2024 Sep 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39225853

RESUMO

The Ozaki procedure is a surgical technique which avoids to implant foreign aortic valve prostheses in human heart, using the patient's own pericardium. Although this approach has well-identified benefits, it is still a topic of debate in the cardiac surgical community, which prevents its larger use to treat valve pathologies. This is linked to the actual lack of knowledge regarding the dynamics of tissue deformations and surrounding blood flow for this autograft pericardial valve. So far, there is no numerical study examining the coupling between the blood flow characteristics and the Ozaki leaflets dynamics. To fill this gap, we propose here a comprehensive comparison of various performance criteria between a healthy native valve, its pericardium-based counterpart, and a bioprosthetic solution, this is done using a three-dimensional fluid-structure interaction solver. Our findings reveal similar physiological dynamics between the valves but with the emergence of fluttering for the Ozaki leaflets and higher velocity and wall shear stress for the bioprosthetic heart valve.

2.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38830038

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: Three-dimensional (3D) modelling of aortic leaflets remains difficult due to insufficient resolution of medical imaging. We aimed to model the coaptation and load-bearing surfaces of the aortic leaflets and adapt this workflow to aid in the design of aortic valve neocuspidizations. METHODS: Geometric morphometrics, using landmarks and semilandmarks, was applied to the geometric determinants of the aortic leaflets from computed tomography, followed by an isogeometric analysis using Non-Uniform Rational Basis Splines (NURBS). Ten aortic valve models were generated, measuring determinants of leaflet geometry defined as 3D NURBS curves, and leaflet coaptation and load-bearing surfaces were defined as 3D NURBS surfaces. Neocuspidizations were obtained by either shifting the upper central coaptation landmark towards the sinotubular junction or using parametric neo-landmarks placed on a centreline drawn between the centroid of the aortic root base and centroid of a circle circumscribing the 3 upper commissural landmarks. RESULTS: The ratio of the leaflet free margin length to the geometric height was 1.83, whereas the ratio of the commissural coaptation height to the central coaptation height was 1.93. The median coaptation surface was 137 mm2 (IQR 58) and the median load-bearing surface was 203 mm2 (60) per leaflet. Neocuspidization multiplied the central coaptation height by 3.7 and the coaptation surfaces by 1.97 and 1.92 using the native coaptation axis and centroid coaptation axis, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Geometric morphometrics reliably defined the coaptation and load-bearing surfaces of aortic leaflets, enabling an experimental 3D design for the in silico neocuspidization of aortic valves.

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