Hellevik L R, Segers P, Stergiopulos N, Irgens F, Verdonck P, Thompson C R, Lo K, Miyagishima R T, Smiseth O A
Department of Applied Mechanics, Thermodynamics and Fluid Dynamics, The Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim.
Heart Vessels. 1999;14(2):67-71. doi: 10.1007/BF02481745.
The pulmonary venous systolic flow wave has been attributed both to left heart phenomena, such as left atrial relaxation and descent of the mitral annulus, and to propagation of the pulmonary artery pressure pulse through the pulmonary bed from the right ventricle. In this study we hypothesized that all waves in the pulmonary veins originate in the left heart, and that the gross wave features observed in measurements can be explained simply by wave propagation and reflection. A mathematical model of the pulmonary vein was developed; the pulmonary vein was modeled as a lossless transmission line and the pulmonary bed by a three-element lumped parameter model accounting for viscous losses, compliance, and inertia. We assumed that all pulsations originate in the left atrium (LA), the pressure in the pulmonary bed being constant. The model was validated using pulmonary vein pressure and flow recorded 1 cm proximal to the junction of the vein with the left atrium during aortocoronary bypass surgery. For a pressure drop of 6 mmHg across the pulmonary bed, we found a transit time from the left atrium to the pulmonary bed of tau approximately 150ms, a compliance of the pulmonary bed of C approximately 0.4 ml/mmHg, and an inertance of the pulmonary bed of 1.1 mmHgs2/ml. The pulse wave velocity of the pulmonary vein was estimated to be c approximately 1m/s. Waves, however, travel both towards the left atrium and towards the pulmonary bed. Waves traveling towards the left atrium are attributed to the reflections caused by the mismatch of impedance of line (pulmonary vein) and load (pulmonary bed). Wave intensity analysis was used to identify a period in systole of net wave propagation towards the left atrium for both measurements and model. The linear separation technique was used to split the pressure into one component traveling from the left atrium to the pulmonary bed and a reflected component propagating from the pulmonary bed to the left atrium. The peak of the reflected pressure wave corresponded well with the positive peak in wave intensity in systole. We conclude that the gross features of the pressure and flow waves in the pulmonary vein can be explained in the following manner: the waves originate in the LA and travel towards the pulmonary bed, where reflections give rise to waves traveling back to the LA. Although the gross features of the measured pressure were captured well by the model predicted pressure, there was still some discrepancy between the two. Thus, other factors initiating or influencing waves traveling towards the LA cannot be excluded.
肺静脉收缩期血流波既归因于左心现象,如左心房舒张和二尖瓣环下移,也归因于肺动脉压力脉冲从右心室通过肺床的传播。在本研究中,我们假设肺静脉中的所有波都起源于左心,并且测量中观察到的总体波特征可以简单地用波的传播和反射来解释。建立了肺静脉的数学模型;将肺静脉建模为无损传输线,将肺床建模为一个考虑粘性损失、顺应性和惯性的三元集总参数模型。我们假设所有脉动都起源于左心房(LA),肺床压力恒定。在主动脉冠状动脉搭桥手术期间,使用在肺静脉与左心房交界处近端1 cm处记录的肺静脉压力和血流对模型进行了验证。对于肺床两端6 mmHg的压降,我们发现从左心房到肺床的传输时间τ约为150 ms,肺床的顺应性C约为0.4 ml/mmHg,肺床的惯性为1.1 mmHgs2/ml。肺静脉的脉搏波速度估计为c约1m/s。然而,波既向左心房传播,也向肺床传播。向左心房传播的波归因于线路(肺静脉)和负载(肺床)阻抗不匹配引起的反射。使用波强度分析来确定测量和模型中向左侧心房净波传播的收缩期时间段。采用线性分离技术将压力分为从左心房向肺床传播的一个分量和从肺床向左侧心房传播的反射分量。反射压力波的峰值与收缩期波强度的正峰值对应良好。我们得出结论,肺静脉压力和血流波的总体特征可以用以下方式解释:波起源于左心房并向肺床传播,在肺床处反射产生回到左心房的波。尽管模型预测压力很好地捕捉到了测量压力的总体特征,但两者之间仍存在一些差异。因此,不能排除其他启动或影响向左心房传播的波的因素。