Marsden Alison L, Vignon-Clementel Irene E, Chan Frandics P, Feinstein Jeffrey A, Taylor Charles A
Pediatrics Department, Stanford University, Clark Center E350, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Ann Biomed Eng. 2007 Feb;35(2):250-63. doi: 10.1007/s10439-006-9224-3. Epub 2006 Dec 15.
Congenital heart defects with a single functional ventricle, such as hypoplastic left heart syndrome and tricuspid atresia, require a staged surgical approach to separate the systemic and pulmonary circulations. Ultimately, the venous or pulmonary side of the heart is bypassed by directly connecting the vena cava to the pulmonary arteries with a modified t-shaped junction. The Fontan procedure (total cavopulmonary connection, TCPC) completes this process of separation. To date, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations in this low pressure, passive flow, intrathoracic system have neglected the presumed important effects of respiration on physiology and higher "stress" states such as with exercise have never been considered. We hypothesize that incorporating effects of respiration and exercise would provide more realistic estimates of TCPC performance. Time-dependent, 3D blood flow simulations are performed by a custom finite element solver for two patient-specific Fontan models with a novel respiration model, developed to generate physiologic time-varying flow conditions. Blood flow features, pressure, and energy efficiency are analyzed at rest and with increasing flow rates to simulate exercise conditions. The simulations produce realistic pressure and flow data, comparable to that measured by catheterization and echocardiography, and demonstrate substantial increases in energy dissipation (i.e. decreased performance) with exercise and respiration due to increasing intensity of small scale vortices in the flow. As would be expected, these changes are highly dependent on patient-specific anatomy and Fontan geometry. We propose that respiration and exercise should be incorporated into TCPC CFD simulations to provide increasingly realistic evaluations of TCPC performance.
单心室先天性心脏缺陷,如左心发育不全综合征和三尖瓣闭锁,需要采用分期手术方法来分离体循环和肺循环。最终,通过用改良的T形连接将腔静脉直接连接到肺动脉,绕过心脏的静脉侧或肺侧。Fontan手术(全腔肺连接,TCPC)完成了这一分离过程。迄今为止,在这个低压、被动血流的胸腔内系统中,计算流体动力学(CFD)模拟忽略了呼吸对生理的假定重要影响,并且从未考虑过运动等更高“应激”状态的影响。我们假设纳入呼吸和运动的影响将能更真实地评估TCPC的性能。通过一个定制的有限元求解器,针对两个患者特异性Fontan模型进行了随时间变化的三维血流模拟,并采用了一种新颖的呼吸模型,该模型可生成生理时变血流条件。在静息状态和模拟运动条件下增加流速时,分析血流特征、压力和能量效率。模拟产生了与导管插入术和超声心动图测量结果相当的真实压力和血流数据,并表明随着运动和呼吸,由于血流中小尺度涡旋强度增加,能量耗散大幅增加(即性能下降)。正如预期的那样,这些变化高度依赖于患者特异性解剖结构和Fontan几何形状。我们建议应将呼吸和运动纳入TCPC的CFD模拟中,以对TCPC性能进行越来越真实的评估。