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The relationship between coronary stenosis morphology and fractional flow reserve: a computational fluid dynamics modelling study

Authors :
D. Rodney Hose
Roberto T F Newcombe
Rebecca Gosling
Patricia V. Lawford
Julian Gunn
Vignesh Rammohan
Paul Morris
Source :
European Heart Journal - Digital Health. 2:616-625
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Aims International guidelines mandate the use of fractional flow reserve (FFR) and/or non-hyperaemic pressure ratios to assess the physiological significance of moderate coronary artery lesions to guide revascularization decisions. However, they remain underused such that visual estimation of lesion severity continues to be the predominant decision-making tool. It would be pragmatic to have an improved understanding of the relationship between lesion morphology and haemodynamics. The aim of this study was to compute virtual FFR (vFFR) in idealized coronary artery geometries with a variety of stenosis and vessel characteristics. Methods and results Coronary artery geometries were modelled, based upon physiologically realistic branched arteries. Common stenosis characteristics were studied, including % narrowing, length, eccentricity, shape, number, position relative to branch, and distal (myocardial) resistance. Computational fluid dynamics modelling was used to calculate vFFRs using the VIRTUheart™ system. Percentage lesion severity had the greatest effect upon FFR. Any ≥80% diameter stenosis in two views (i.e. concentric) was physiologically significant (FFR ≤ 0.80), irrespective of length, shape, or vessel diameter. Almost all eccentric stenoses and all 50% concentric stenoses were physiologically non-significant, whilst 70% uniform concentric stenoses about 10 mm long straddled the ischaemic threshold (FFR 0.80). A low microvascular resistance (MVR) reduced FFR on average by 0.05, and a high MVR increased it by 0.03. Conclusion Using computational modelling, we have produced an analysis of vFFR that relates stenosis characteristics to haemodynamic significance. The strongest predictor of a positive vFFR was a concentric, ≥80% diameter stenosis. The importance of MVR was quantified. Other lesion characteristics have a limited impact.

Details

ISSN :
26343916
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal - Digital Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e0b637e004225bc815e3fa71316e1e3e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ehjdh/ztab075