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From Clinical Imaging to Patient-Specific Computational Model: Rapid Adaptation of the Living Heart Human Model to a Case of Aortic Stenosis

Authors :
Jiang Yao
Andrew D. Wisneski
Julius M. Guccione
Salvatore Pasta
Salvatore Cutugno
Ashley Stroh
Vaikom S. Mahadevan
Daniel B. Ennis, Luigi E. Perotti, Vicky Y. Wang
Wisneski A.D.
Cutugno S.
Stroh A.
Pasta S.
Yao J.
Mahadevan V.S.
Guccione J.M.
Source :
Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart ISBN: 9783030787097, FIMH
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

Aortic stenosis (AS) is the most common acquired heart valve disease in the developed world. Traditional methods of grading AS have relied on the measurement of aortic valve area and transvalvular pressure gradient. Recent research has highlighted the existence of AS variants that do not meet classic criteria for severe AS such as low-flow, low-gradient AS. With the development of sophisticated multi-scale computational models, investigation into the left ventricular (LV) biomechanics of AS offers new insights into the pathophysiology that may guide treatment decisions surrounding AS. Building upon our prior study entailing LV-aortic coupling where AS conditions were applied to the idealized geometry of the Living Heart Human Model, we now describe the first patient-specific adaptation of the model to a case of low flow, low gradient AS. EKG-gated cardiac computed tomography images were segmented to provide surfaces to which the generic Living Heart model was adapted. The model was coupled to a lumped-parameter circulatory system; it was then calibrated to patient clinical data from echocardiography/cardiac catheterization with strong correlation (simulation versus clinical measurement): ascending aorta systolic pressure: 109mmHg vs 116mmHg, ascending aorta diastolic pressure 50mmHg vs 45mmHg, LV systolic pressure: 118mmHg vs 128mmHg, peak transvalvular gradient: 9mmHg vs 12mmHg, LV ejection fraction: 23% vs 25%. This work illustrates how the Living Heart Human Model geometry can be efficiently adapted to patient-specific parameters, enabling future biomechanics investigations into the LV dysfunction of AS.

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-3-030-78709-7
ISBNs :
9783030787097
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart ISBN: 9783030787097, FIMH
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a7065a92398870265e2f2f209f572c76