34 research outputs found

    Influence of Annular Dynamics and Material Behavior in Finite Element Analysis of Barlow’s Mitral Valve Disease

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    Barlow’s disease affects the entire mitral valve apparatus, by altering several of the fundamental mechanisms in the mitral valve which ensures unidirectional blood flow between the left atrium and the left ventricle. In this paper, a finite element model of a patient diagnosed with Barlow’s disease with patient-specific geometry and boundary conditions is presented. The geometry and boundary conditions are extracted from the echocardiographic assessment of the patient prior to surgery. Material properties representing myxomatous, healthy human and animal mitral valves are implemented and computed response are compared with each other and the echocardiographic images of the patient. This study shows that the annular dilation observed in Barlow’s patients controls several aspects of the mitral valve behavior during ventricular systole. The coaptation of the leaflets is observed to be highly dependent on annular dilation, and the coaptation area reduces rapidly at the onset of mitral regurgitation. Furthermore, the leaflet material implementation is important to predict lack of closure in the FE model correctly. It was observed that using healthy human material parameters in the Barlow’s diseased FE geometry gave severe lack of closure from the onset of mitral regurgitation, while myxomatous material properties showed a more physiological leakage.publishedVersio

    Correlation between Murmurs and Echocardiographic Findings; From an Imaging Cardiologist Point of View

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    A heart murmur in adults is a common reason for referral for echocardiography at most general cardiology clinics in Europe. A murmur may indicate either a mild age-related valvular calcification or regurgitation, or represent a significant heart valve disease requiring valvular intervention. Generally, the correlation between murmurs by auscultation and severity of heart valve disease by echocardiography is poor. Particularly, the severity and characterization of diastolic murmurs by auscultation may poorly correlate with echocardiographic findings. This narrative review aims to summarize the differential diagnoses of physiological and pathological murmurs, describes the current referral practice of murmur patients for echocardiography, and presents a single-center experience on the correlation of auscultation and echocardiographic findings with a particular focus on aortic and mitral valve diseases. A careful auscultation of the heart prior to the echocardiogram is mandatory and may help to predict the echocardiographic findings and their interpretation in view of the clinical information. The correlation between clinical examination, point of care ultrasound and standard echocardiography is a matter of continued exploration.publishedVersio

    Finite element analysis of mitral valve annuloplasty in Barlow's disease

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    Barlow’s Disease affects the entire mitral valve apparatus causing mitral regurgitation. Standard annuloplasty procedures lead to an average of 55% annular area reduction of the end diastolic pre-operative annular area in Barlow’s diseased valves. Following annular reduction, mitral valvuloplasty may be needed, usually with special focus on the posterior leaflet. An in silico pipeline to perform annuloplasty by utilizing the pre- and -postoperative 3D echocardiographic recordings was developed. Our objective was to test the hypothesis that annuloplasty ring sizes based on a percentage (10%–25%) decrease of the pre-operative annular area at end diastole can result in sufficient coaptation area for the selected Barlow’s diseased patient. The patient specific mitral valve geometry and finite element model were created from echocardiography recordings. The post-operative echocardiography was used to obtain the artificial ring geometry and displacements, and the motion of the papillary muscles after surgery. These were used as boundary conditions in our annuloplasty finite element analyses. Then, the segmented annuloplasty ring was scaled up to represent a 10%, 20% and 25% reduction of the pre-operative end diastolic annular area and implanted to the end diastolic pre-operative finite element model. The pre-operative contact area decrease was shown to be dependent on the annular dilation at late systole. Constraining the mitral valve from dilating excessively can be sufficient to achieve proper coaptation throughout systole. The finite element analyses show that the selected Barlow’s diseased patient may benefit from an annuloplasty ring with moderate annular reduction alone.publishedVersio

    In silico analysis provides insights for patient-specific annuloplasty in Barlow’s disease

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    Objective To predict the required mitral annular area reduction in patients with Barlow's disease to obtain a predefined leaflet area index by a novel in silico modeling method. Methods Three-dimensional echocardiography was used to create patient-specific mitral valve models of 8 patients diagnosed with Barlow's disease and bileaflet prolapse preoperatively. Six patients were also studied postoperatively in a finite element framework, to quantify the optimal coaptation area index. For the patient-specific finite element analyses, realistic papillary muscle and annular motion are incorporated, also for the in silico annuloplasty analyses. The annuloplasty ring size is reduced moderately until the optimal coaptation area index is achieved for each patient. Results The mean mitral annular area at end-diastole was reduced by 58 ± 7% postoperatively (P < .001), resulting in a postoperative coaptation area index of 20 ± 5%. To achieve the same coaptation area index with moderate annular reductions and no leaflet resection the annular reduction was 31 ± 6% (P < .001). Conclusions In silico analysis in selected patients diagnosed with Barlow's disease demonstrates that annuloplasty with only moderate annular reduction may be sufficient to achieve optimal coaptation as compared to conventional surgical procedures.publishedVersio

    Comparison of ultrasound vector flow imaging and CFD simulations with PIV measurements of flow in a left ventricular outflow trackt phantom - Implications for clinical use and in silico studies

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    In this study we have compared two modalities for flow quantification from measurement data; ultrasound (US) and shadow particle image velocimetry (PIV), and a flow simulation model using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). For the comparison we have used an idealized Quasi-2D phantom of the human left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT). The PIV data will serve as a reference for the true flow field in our setup. Furthermore, the US vector flow imaging (VFI) data has been post processed with model-based regularization developed to both smooth noise and sharpen physical flow features. The US VFI flow reconstruction results in an underestimation of the flow velocity magnitude compared to PIV and CFD. The CFD results coincide very well with the PIV flow field maximum velocities and curl intensity, as well as with the detailed vortex structure, however, this correspondence is subject to exact boundary conditions.publishedVersio

    Impact of aortic valve stenosis on myocardial deformation in different left ventricular levels: A three-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography study

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    Background: Global systolic left ventricular (LV) myocardial function progressively declines as degenerative aortic valve stenosis (AS) progresses. Whether this results in uniformly distributed deformation changes from base to apex has not been investigated. Methods: Eighty-five AS patients underwent three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography in this cross-sectional study. Patients were grouped by peak jet velocity into mild (n = 32), moderate (n = 31), and severe (n = 22) AS. 3D speckle tracking derived strain, rotation, twist, and torsion were obtained to assess global LV function and myocardial function at the apical, mid, and basal levels. Results: Global longitudinal strain (GLS) was lower in patients with severe AS (-16.1 ± 2.4% in mild, -15.5 ± 2.5% in moderate, and -13.5 ± 3.0% in severe AS [all p < .01]). Peak basal and mid longitudinal strain (LS), basal rotation and twist from apical to basal level followed the same pattern, while peak apical LS was higher in moderate AS compared to severe AS (all p < .05). In multivariate analyses, lower GLS was particularly associated with male sex, higher body mass index and peak aortic jet velocity, lower basal LS with higher filling pressure (E/e’) and LV mass, lower mid LS with higher RWT and presence of AS symptoms, and lower apical LS with male sex and higher systolic blood pressure, respectively (all p < .05). Conclusion: Using 3D speckle tracking echocardiography reveals regional and global changes in LV mechanics in AS related to the severity of AS, LV remodeling and presence of cardiovascular risk factors.publishedVersio

    Mechanical behavior and collagen structure of degenerative mitral valve leaflets and a finite element model of primary mitral regurgitation

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    Degenerative mitral valve disease is the main cause of primary mitral regurgitation with two phenotypes: fibroelastic deficiency (FED) often with localized myxomatous degeneration and diffuse myxomatous degeneration or Barlow’s disease. Myxomatous degeneration disrupts the microstructure of the mitral valve leaflets, particularly the collagen fibers, which affects the mechanical behavior of the leaflets. The present study uses biaxial mechanical tests and second harmonic generation microscopy to examine the mechanical behavior of Barlow and FED tissue. Three tissue samples were harvested from a FED patient and one sample is from a Barlow patient. Then we use an appropriate constitutive model by excluding the collagen fibers under compression. Finally, we built an FE model based on the echocardiography of patients diagnosed with FED and Barlow and the characterized material model and collagen fiber orientation. The Barlow sample and the FED sample from the most affected segment showed different mechanical behavior and collagen structure compared to the other two FED samples. The FE model showed very good agreement with echocardiography with 2.02 ± 1.8 mm and 1.05 ± 0.79 mm point-to-mesh distance errors for Barlow and FED patients, respectively. It has also been shown that the exclusion of collagen fibers under compression provides versatility for the material model; it behaves stiff in the belly region, preventing excessive bulging, while it behaves very softly in the commissures to facilitate folding.publishedVersio

    Mitral annular dynamics are influenced by left ventricular load and contractility in an acute animal model

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    The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of loading conditions and left ventricular (LV) contractility on mitral annular dynamics. In 10 anesthetized pigs, eight piezoelectric transducers were implanted equidistantly around the mitral annulus. High-fidelity catheters measured left ventricular pressures and the slope of the end-systolic pressure-volume relationship (Ees) determined LV contractility. Adjustments of pre- and afterload were done by constriction of the inferior caval vein and occlusion of the descending aorta. Mitral annulus area indexed to body surface area (MAAi ), annular circularity index (ACI), and nonplanarity angle (NPA) were calculated by computational analysis. MAAi was more dynamic in response to loading interventions than ACI and NPA. However, MAAi maximal cyclical reduction (−Δr) and average deformational velocity (−v) did not change accordingly (p=0.31 and p=0.22). Reduced Ees was associated to attenuation in MAAi -Δr and MAAi -v (r 2=0.744; p=0.001 and r 2=0.467; p=0.029). In conclusion, increased cardiac load and reduced LV contractility may cause deterioration of mitral annular dynamics, likely impairing coaptation and increasing susceptibility to valvular incompetence.publishedVersio

    Supernormal functional reserve of apical segments in elite soccer players: an ultrasound speckle tracking handgrip stress study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Ultrasound speckle tracking from grey scale images allows the assessment of regional strain derived from 2D regardless of angle intonation, and it is highly reproducible. The study aimed to evaluate regional left ventricular functional reserve in elite soccer players.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>50 subjects (25 elite athletes and 25 sedentary controls), aged 26 ± 3.5, were submitted to an echo exam, at rest and after the Hand Grip (HG) test. Both standard echo parameters and strain were evaluated.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Ejection fraction was similar in athletes and controls both at rest (athletes 58 ± 2 vs controls 57 ± 4 p ns) and after HG (athletes 60 ± 2 vs controls 58 ± 3 p ns). Basal (septal and anterior) segments showed similar strain values in athletes and controls both at rest (athletes S% -19.9 ± 4.2; controls S% -18.8 ± 4.9 p = ns) and after HG (athletes S% -20.99 ± 2.8; controls S% -19.46 ± 4.4 p = ns). Medium-apical segments showed similar strain values at rest (athletes S% -17.31 ± 2.3; controls S% -20.00 ± 5.3 p = ns), but higher values in athletes after HG (athletes S% -24.47 ± 2.8; controls S% -20.47 ± 5.4 p < 0.05)</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In athletes with physiological myocardial hypertrophy, a brief isometric effort produces enhancement of the strain in medium-apical left ventricular segments, suggesting the presence of a higher regional function reserve which can be elicited with an inotropic challenge and suitable methods of radial function quantification such as 2D-derived strain.</p

    Semi-automated quantification of left ventricular volumes and ejection fraction by real-time three-dimensional echocardiography

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Recent studies have shown that real-time three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography (RT3DE) gives more accurate and reproducible left ventricular (LV) volume and ejection fraction (EF) measurements than traditional two-dimensional methods. A new semi-automated tool (4DLVQ) for volume measurements in RT3DE has been developed. We sought to evaluate the accuracy and repeatability of this method compared to a 3D echo standard.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>LV end-diastolic volumes (EDV), end-systolic volumes (ESV), and EF measured using 4DLVQ were compared with a commercially available semi-automated analysis tool (TomTec 4D LV-Analysis ver. 2.2) in 35 patients. Repeated measurements were performed to investigate inter- and intra-observer variability.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Average analysis time of the new tool was 141s, significantly shorter than 261s using TomTec (<it>p </it>< 0.001). Bland Altman analysis revealed high agreement of measured EDV, ESV, and EF compared to TomTec (<it>p </it>= <it>NS</it>), with bias and 95% limits of agreement of 2.1 ± 21 ml, -0.88 ± 17 ml, and 1.6 ± 11% for EDV, ESV, and EF respectively. Intra-observer variability of 4DLVQ vs. TomTec was 7.5 ± 6.2 ml vs. 7.7 ± 7.3 ml for EDV, 5.5 ± 5.6 ml vs. 5.0 ± 5.9 ml for ESV, and 3.0 ± 2.7% vs. 2.1 ± 2.0% for EF (<it>p </it>= <it>NS</it>). The inter-observer variability of 4DLVQ vs. TomTec was 9.0 ± 5.9 ml vs. 17 ± 6.3 ml for EDV (<it>p </it>< 0.05), 5.0 ± 3.6 ml vs. 12 ± 7.7 ml for ESV (<it>p </it>< 0.05), and 2.7 ± 2.8% vs. 3.0 ± 2.1% for EF (<it>p </it>= <it>NS</it>).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In conclusion, the new analysis tool gives rapid and reproducible measurements of LV volumes and EF, with good agreement compared to another RT3DE volume quantification tool.</p
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