Literature DB >> 15307536

The closing behavior of mechanical aortic heart valve prostheses.

Po-Chien Lu1, Jia-Shing Liu, Ren-Hong Huang, Chi-Wen Lo, Ho-Cheng Lai, Ned H C Hwang.   

Abstract

Mechanical artificial heart valves rely on reverse flow to close their leaflets. This mechanism creates regurgitation and water hammer effects that may form cavitations, damage blood cells, and cause thromboembolism. This study analyzes closing mechanisms of monoleaflet (Medtronic Hall 27), bileaflet (Carbo-Medics 27; St. Jude Medical 27; Duromedics 29), and trileaflet valves in a circulatory mock loop, including an aortic root with three sinuses. Downstream flow field velocity was measured via digital particle image velocimetry (DPIV). A high speed camera (PIVCAM 10-30 CCD video camera) tracked leaflet movement at 1000 frames/s. All valves open in 40-50 msec, but monoleaflet and bileaflet valves close in much less time (< 35 msec) than the trileaflet valve (>75 msec). During acceleration phase of systole, the monoleaflet forms a major and minor flow, the bileaflet has three jet flows, and the trileaflet produces a single central flow like physiologic valves. In deceleration phase, the aortic sinus vortices hinder monoleaflet and bileaflet valve closure until reverse flows and high negative transvalvular pressure push the leaflets rapidly for a hard closure. Conversely, the vortices help close the trileaflet valve more softly, probably causing less damage, lessening back flow, and providing a washing effect that may prevent thrombosis formation.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15307536     DOI: 10.1097/01.mat.0000130678.59655.c0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ASAIO J        ISSN: 1058-2916            Impact factor:   2.872


  5 in total

1.  Numerical comparison of the closing dynamics of a new trileaflet and a bileaflet mechanical aortic heart valve.

Authors:  Chi-Pei Li; Po-Chien Lu
Journal:  J Artif Organs       Date:  2012-06-13       Impact factor: 1.731

2.  Effects of mechanical valve orifice direction on the flow pattern in a ventricular assist device.

Authors:  Eiki Akagawa; Hwansung Lee; Eisuke Tatsumi; Akihiko Homma; Tomonori Tsukiya; Nobumasa Katagiri; Yukihide Kakuta; Tomohiro Nishinaka; Toshihide Mizuno; Kei Ota; Rei Kansaku; Yoshiyuki Taenaka
Journal:  J Artif Organs       Date:  2007-06-20       Impact factor: 1.731

3.  Effects of leaflet geometry on the flow field in three bileaflet valves when installed in a pneumatic ventricular assist device.

Authors:  Hwansung Lee; Yoshiaki Ikeuchi; Eiki Akagawa; Eisuke Tatsumi; Yoshiyuki Taenaka; Takao Yamamoto
Journal:  J Artif Organs       Date:  2009-06-18       Impact factor: 1.731

Review 4.  Review of numerical methods for simulation of mechanical heart valves and the potential for blood clotting.

Authors:  Mohamad Shukri Zakaria; Farzad Ismail; Masaaki Tamagawa; Ahmad Fazli Abdul Aziz; Surjatin Wiriadidjaja; Adi Azrif Basri; Kamarul Arifin Ahmad
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2017-07-26       Impact factor: 2.602

5.  Automatic segmentation and tracking of biological prosthetic heart valves.

Authors:  Maryam Alizadeh; Melissa Cote; Alexandra Branzan Albu
Journal:  J Med Imaging (Bellingham)       Date:  2021-02-12
  5 in total

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