Kleine Peter, Scherer Mirella, Abdel-Rahman Ulf, Klesius Armin A, Ackermann Hans, Moritz Anton
Department of Thoracic & Cardiovascular Surgery and the Department of Biomedical Statistics, Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe University, Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2002 Nov;124(5):925-32. doi: 10.1067/mtc.2002.126046.
Orientation for optimal systolic performance of tilting disc and bileaflet aortic valves was defined in previous studies. The present study investigates the influence of valve orientation on coronary artery flow in an animal model.
A rotation device holding either a Medtronic Hall tilting disc (n = 4; Medtronic, Inc, Minneapolis, Minn), a St Jude Medical bileaflet (n = 4; St Jude Medical, Inc, St Paul, Minn), or a Medtronic Advantage bileaflet (n = 3) aortic valve was implanted. The device allowed rotation of the valve without reopening the aorta. Flow through the left anterior descending coronary artery was measured preoperatively and at normal versus high cardiac output after weaning from extracorporeal circulation. Measurements were performed at the best and worst hemodynamic position, as defined previously.
Coronary flow rates were similar in all animals preoperatively (26 +/- 4.1 mL/min). After aortic valve replacement, left anterior descending flow increased significantly to 58.2 +/- 10.6 mL/min. Highest flow rates at normal cardiac output were found in the optimum orientation, especially for the Medtronic valves (Medtronic Hall, 64 +/- 8.7 mL/min; Medtronic Advantage, 64.6 +/- 11.6 mL/min; St Jude Medical, 48.3 +/- 10.3 mL/min), whereas the worst position demonstrated significantly lower left anterior descending flow, with no differences among valves (Medtronic Hall, 37.5 +/- 1.3 mL/min; St Jude Medical, 35.7 +/- 10.7 mL/min; Medtronic Advantage, 39.8 +/- 10 mL/min). Left anterior descending artery flow increased significantly with higher cardiac output.
Coronary blood flow was significantly influenced by mechanical aortic valve implantation and the orientation of prostheses. For both valve designs, the previously defined optimum orientation with respect to pressure gradients and turbulence demonstrated the highest left anterior descending flow rates. Even in its optimum orientation, the St Jude Medical valve showed significantly lower coronary flow than the other valves.
以往研究已明确了倾斜碟瓣和双叶主动脉瓣实现最佳收缩功能的方向。本研究在动物模型中探究瓣膜方向对冠状动脉血流的影响。
植入一个可容纳美敦力霍尔倾斜碟瓣(n = 4;美敦力公司,明尼阿波利斯,明尼苏达州)、圣犹达医疗双叶瓣(n = 4;圣犹达医疗公司,圣保罗,明尼苏达州)或美敦力优势双叶瓣(n = 3)主动脉瓣的旋转装置。该装置可使瓣膜旋转而无需重新打开主动脉。在体外循环撤机后,于术前以及正常心输出量和高心输出量状态下测量通过左前降支冠状动脉的血流。测量在先前定义的最佳和最差血流动力学位置进行。
所有动物术前冠状动脉血流速率相似(26±4.1毫升/分钟)。主动脉瓣置换术后,左前降支血流显著增加至58.2±10.6毫升/分钟。在正常心输出量时,最佳方向的血流速率最高,尤其是美敦力瓣膜(美敦力霍尔瓣,64±8.7毫升/分钟;美敦力优势瓣,64.6±11.6毫升/分钟;圣犹达医疗瓣,48.3±10.3毫升/分钟),而最差位置的左前降支血流显著降低,各瓣膜之间无差异(美敦力霍尔瓣,37.5±1.3毫升/分钟;圣犹达医疗瓣,35.7±10.7毫升/分钟;美敦力优势瓣,39.8±10毫升/分钟)。左前降支动脉血流随心输出量增加而显著增加。
机械主动脉瓣植入及假体方向对冠状动脉血流有显著影响。对于两种瓣膜设计,先前根据压力梯度和湍流定义的最佳方向显示出最高的左前降支血流速率。即使处于最佳方向,圣犹达医疗瓣的冠状动脉血流仍显著低于其他瓣膜。