Gilon D, Cape E G, Handschumacher M D, Jiang L, Sears C, Solheim J, Morris E, Strobel J T, Miller-Jones S M, Weyman A E, Levine R A
Cardiac Ultrasound Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston 02114, USA.
Circulation. 1996 Aug 1;94(3):452-9. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.94.3.452.
Three-dimensional echocardiography can allow us to address uniquely three-dimensional scientific questions, for example, the hypothesis that the impact of a stenotic valve depends not only on its limiting orifice area but also on its three-dimensional geometry proximal to the orifice. This can affect the coefficient of orifice contraction (Cc = effective/anatomic area), which is important because for a given flow rate and anatomic area, a lower Cc gives a higher velocity and pressure gradient, and Cc, routinely assumed constant in the Gorlin equation, may vary with valve shape (60% for a flat plate, 100% for a tube). To date, it has not been possible to study this with actual valve shapes in patients.
Three-dimensional echocardiography reconstructed valve geometries typical of the spectrum in patients with mitral stenosis: mobile doming, intermediate conical, and relatively flat immobile valves. Each geometry was constructed with orifice areas of 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5 cm2 by stereolithography (computerized laser polymerization) (total, nine valves) and studied at physiological flow rates. Cc varied prominently with shape and was larger for the longer, tapered dome (more gradual flow convergence proximal and distal to the limiting orifice): for an anatomic orifice of 1.5 cm2, Cc increased from 0.73 (flat) to 0.87 (dome), and for an area of 0.5 cm2, from 0.62 to 0.75. For each shape, Cc increased with increasing orifice size relative to the proximal funnel (more tubelike). These variations translated into important differences of up to 40% in pressure gradient for the same anatomic area and flow rate (greatest for the flattest valves), with a corresponding variation in calculated Gorlin area (an effective area) relative to anatomic values.
The coefficient of contraction and the related net pressure loss are importantly affected by the variations in leaflet geometry seen in patients with mitral stenosis. Three-dimensional echocardiography and stereolithography, with the use of actual information from patients, can address such uniquely three-dimensional questions to provide insight into the relations between cardiac structure, pressure, and flows.
三维超声心动图能让我们专门解决三维科学问题,例如,狭窄瓣膜的影响不仅取决于其狭窄口面积,还取决于狭窄口近端的三维几何形状这一假说。这会影响口收缩系数(Cc = 有效面积/解剖面积),这很重要,因为对于给定的流速和解剖面积,较低的Cc会产生较高的速度和压力梯度,并且在戈林方程中通常假定为常数的Cc可能会随瓣膜形状而变化(平板为60%,管为100%)。迄今为止,还无法在患者中使用实际瓣膜形状来研究这一问题。
三维超声心动图重建了二尖瓣狭窄患者频谱中典型的瓣膜几何形状:活动圆顶状、中间圆锥状和相对扁平的固定瓣膜。每种几何形状通过立体光刻法(计算机激光聚合)构建了口面积为0.5、1.0和1.5平方厘米的瓣膜(共九个瓣膜),并在生理流速下进行研究。Cc随形状显著变化,对于较长的锥形圆顶(狭窄口近端和远端的血流汇聚更平缓)更大:对于解剖口面积为1.5平方厘米的情况,Cc从0.73(扁平状)增加到0.87(圆顶状),对于面积为0.5平方厘米的情况,从0.62增加到0.75。对于每种形状,相对于近端漏斗(更像管),Cc随口尺寸增加而增加。这些变化导致相同解剖面积和流速下压力梯度的重要差异高达40%(最扁平的瓣膜差异最大),计算出的戈林面积(有效面积)相对于解剖值也有相应变化。
二尖瓣狭窄患者中观察到的瓣叶几何形状变化对收缩系数和相关的净压力损失有重要影响。三维超声心动图和立体光刻法,利用患者的实际信息,能够解决此类独特的三维问题,从而深入了解心脏结构、压力和血流之间的关系。