Authors: Hélène A Simon Lakshmi P Dasi HwaLiang Leo Ajit P Yoganathan
Publish Date: 2007/04/13
Volume: 35, Issue: 8, Pages: 1333-
Abstract
Pointwise velocity measurements have been traditionally acquired to estimate blood damage potential induced by prosthetic heart valves with emphasis on peak values of velocity magnitude and Reynolds stresses However the inherently Lagrangian nature of platelet activation and hemolysis makes such measurements of limited predictive value This study provides a refined fluid mechanical analysis including blood element paths and stress exposure times of the hinge flows of a CarboMedics bileaflet mechanical heart valve placed under both mitral and aortic conditions and a St Jude Medical bileaflet valve placed under aortic conditions The hinge area was partitioned into characteristic regions based on dominant flow structures and spatiotemporal averaging was performed on the measured velocities and Reynolds shear stresses to estimate the average bulk stresses acting on blood elements transiting through the hinge A firstorder estimate of viscous stress levels and exposure times were computed Both forward and leakage flow phases were characterized in each partition by dynamic flows dependent on subtle leaflet movements and transvalvular pressure fluctuations Blood elements trapped in recirculation regions may experience exposure times as long as the entire forward flow phase duration Most calculated stresses were below the accepted blood damage threshold Estimates of the stress levels indicate that the flow conditions within the boundary layers near the hinge and leaflet walls may be more detrimental to blood cells than bulk flow conditions while recirculation regions may promote thrombus buildup
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