Granegger Marcus, Aigner Philipp, Haberl Thomas, Mahr Stephane, Tamez Daniel A, Graham Joel, Nunez Nathalie J, Schima Heinrich, Moscato Francesco
Center for Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering, Medical University of Vienna.
Ludwig Boltzmann Cluster for Cardiovascular Research.
Artif Organs. 2016 Dec;40(12):1113-1120. doi: 10.1111/aor.12730. Epub 2016 May 26.
New left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) offer both important advantages and potential hazards. VAD development requires better and expeditious ways to identify these advantages and hazards. We validated in an isolated working heart the hemodynamic performance of an intraventricular LVAD and investigated how its outflow cannula interacted with the aortic valve. Hearts from six pigs were explanted and connected to an isolated working heart setup. A miniaturized LVAD was implanted within the left ventricle (tMVAD, HeartWare Inc., Miami Lakes, FL, USA). In four experiments blood was used to investigate hemodynamics under various loading conditions. In two experiments crystalloid perfusate was used, allowing visualization of the outflow cannula within the aortic valve. In all hearts the transapical miniaturized ventricular assist device (tMVAD) implantation was successful. In the blood experiments hemodynamics similar to those observed clinically were achieved. Pump speeds ranged from 9 to 22 krpm with a maximum of 7.6 L/min against a pressure difference between ventricle and aorta of ∼50 mm Hg. With crystalloid perfusate, central positioning of the outflow cannula in the aortic root was observed during full and partial support. With decreasing aortic pressures the cannula tended to drift toward the aortic root wall. The tMVAD could unload the ventricle similarly to LVADs under conventional cannulation. Aortic pressure influenced central positioning of the outflow cannula in the aortic root. The isolated heart is a simple, accessible evaluation platform unaffected by complex reactions within a whole, living animal. This platform allowed detection and visualization of potential hazards.
新型左心室辅助装置(LVAD)既有重要优势,也存在潜在风险。VAD的研发需要更好、更迅速的方法来识别这些优势和风险。我们在离体工作心脏中验证了一种心室内LVAD的血流动力学性能,并研究了其流出插管与主动脉瓣的相互作用。取六头猪的心脏,将其取出并连接到离体工作心脏装置上。在左心室内植入一个小型LVAD(tMVAD,HeartWare公司,美国佛罗里达州迈阿密湖)。在四项实验中使用血液来研究不同负荷条件下的血流动力学。在两项实验中使用晶体灌注液,以便观察主动脉瓣内的流出插管。在所有心脏中,经心尖植入小型心室辅助装置(tMVAD)均获成功。在血液实验中,实现了与临床观察相似的血流动力学。泵速范围为9至22 krpm,在心室与主动脉之间压差约为50 mmHg的情况下,最大流量为7.6 L/min。使用晶体灌注液时,在完全和部分支持期间,观察到流出插管在主动脉根部处于中心位置。随着主动脉压力降低,插管倾向于向主动脉根壁漂移。与传统插管方式下的LVAD类似,tMVAD能够使心室卸载负荷。主动脉压力影响流出插管在主动脉根部的中心定位。离体心脏是一个简单、易操作的评估平台,不受完整活体动物体内复杂反应的影响。该平台能够检测并可视化潜在风险。