| Literature DB >> 34618333 |
Daisuke Onohara1,2, Kirthana Sreerangathama Suresh1, Michael Silverman1, Qi He1, Takanori Kono1, Muralidhar Padala3,4.
Abstract
Development of transcatheter mitral valve interventions has ushered a significant need for large animal models of secondary mitral regurgitation. Though currently used heart failure models that chronically develop secondary mitral regurgitation are viable, the severity is lower than patients, the incubation time is long, and mortality is high. We sought to develop a swine model of acute secondary mitral regurgitation that uses image-guided placement of snares around the mitral chordae. Twenty-seven adult swine (n = 27) were assigned to secondary mitral regurgitation induced by valve tethering with image-guided chordal encircling snares (group 1, n = 7, tether MR (tMR)); secondary mitral regurgitation by percutaneous posterolateral myocardial infarction causing ventricular dysfunction and regurgitation (group 2, n = 6, functional MR (fMR)); and control animals (group 3, n = 14). Regurgitant fraction in tMR was 42.1 ± 14.2%, in fMR was 22 ± 9.6%, and in controls was 5.3 ± 3.8%. Mitral tenting height was 9.6 ± 1.3 mm in tMR, 10.1 ± 1.5 mm in fMR, and 5.8 ± 1.2 mm in controls. Chordal encircling tethers reproducibly induce clinically relevant levels of secondary mitral regurgitation, providing a new animal model for use in translational research.Entities:
Keywords: Heart failure; Secondary mitral regurgitation; Transcatheter mitral valve repair; Transcatheter mitral valve replacement
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34618333 DOI: 10.1007/s12265-021-10177-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Transl Res ISSN: 1937-5387 Impact factor: 3.216