1. Regional Aortic Wall Shear Stress Increases over Time in Patients with a Bicuspid Aortic Valve
- Author
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Minderhoud, Savine, Arrouby, Aïmane, van den Hoven, Allard, Bons, Lidia, Chelu, Raluca, Kardys, Isabella, Rizopoulos, Dimitris, Korteland, SA (Suze-Anne), van den Bosch, Annemien, Budde, Ricardo, Hesselink, Jolien, Wentzel, Jolanda, Hirsch, Alexander, Minderhoud, Savine, Arrouby, Aïmane, van den Hoven, Allard, Bons, Lidia, Chelu, Raluca, Kardys, Isabella, Rizopoulos, Dimitris, Korteland, SA (Suze-Anne), van den Bosch, Annemien, Budde, Ricardo, Hesselink, Jolien, Wentzel, Jolanda, and Hirsch, Alexander
- Abstract
Background Aortic wall shear stress (WSS) is a known predictor of ascending aortic growth in patients with a bicuspid aortic valve (BAV). The aim of this study was to study regional WSS and changes over time in BAV patients. Methods BAV patients and age-matched healthy controls underwent 4D flow CMR. Regional, peak systolic ascending aortic WSS, aortic valve function, aortic stiffness measures and aortic dimensions were assessed. In BAV patients, 4D flow CMR was repeated after three years follow-up and both at baseline and follow-up computed tomography angiography (CTA) was acquired. Aortic growth (volume increase of ≥5%) was measured on CTA. Regional WSS differences within patients’ aorta and WSS changes over time were analysed using linear mixed-effect models and were associated with clinical parameters. Results Thirty BAV patients (aged 34 years [IQR 25-41]) were included in the follow-up analysis. Additionally, another 16 BAV patients and 32 healthy controls (aged 33 years [IQR 28-48]) were included for other regional analyses. Magnitude, axial, and circumferential WSS increased over time (all p<0.001) irrespective of aortic growth. The percentage of regions exposed to a magnitude WSS >95th percentile of healthy controls increased from 21% (baseline 506/2400 regions) to 31% (follow-up 734/2400 regions) (p<0.001). WSS angle, a measure of helicity near the aortic wall, decreased during follow-up. Magnitude WSS changes over time were associated with systolic blood pressure, peak aortic valve velocity, aortic valve regurgitation fraction, aortic stiffness indexes, and normalized flow displacement (all p<0.05). Conclusions An increase of regional WSS over time was observed in BAV patients, irrespective of aortic growth. The increasing WSSs comprising a larger area of the aorta warrants further research to investigate the possible predictive value for aortic dissection.
- Published
- 2024