1. An in vivo method for measuring turbulence in mechanical prosthesis leakage jets.
- Author
-
Travis BR, Christensen TD, Smerup M, Olsen MS, Hasenkam JM, and Nygaard H
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Flow Velocity, Blood Pressure physiology, Computer Simulation, Elasticity, Heart Valves surgery, Laser-Doppler Flowmetry, Nonlinear Dynamics, Periodicity, Pulsatile Flow, Stress, Mechanical, Swine, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Pulsed instrumentation, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Pulsed methods, Vascular Capacitance, Vascular Resistance, Equipment Failure Analysis methods, Heart Valve Prosthesis, Heart Valves diagnostic imaging, Heart Valves physiopathology, Hemorheology methods, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Models, Cardiovascular
- Abstract
This work introduces a method for the in vivo measurement and analysis of turbulence within the leakage of a mechanical heart valve. Several analysis techniques were applied to ultrasound measurements acquired within the atrium of a pig, and error associated with these techniques was analyzed. The technique chosen applies cyclic averaging to mean and maximum velocity measurements within small, normalized phase windows to calculate Reynolds normal stresses in the direction of the ultrasound beam. Maximum shear stresses are estimated from these normal stresses using an analytical technique. The stresses observed were smaller than those reported from previous in vitro simulations.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF