학술논문

A computational study of aortic reconstruction in single ventricle patients
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Mathematics - Dynamical Systems
Physics - Medical Physics
Quantitative Biology - Tissues and Organs
Language
Abstract
Patients with hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) are born with an underdeveloped left heart. They typically receive a sequence of surgeries that result in a single ventricle physiology called the Fontan circulation. While these patients usually survive into early adulthood, they are at risk for medical complications, partially due to their lower than normal cardiac output, which leads to insufficient cerebral and gut perfusion. While clinical imaging data can provide detailed insight into cardiovascular function within the imaged region, it is difficult to use this data for assessing deficiencies in the rest of the body and for deriving blood pressure dynamics. Data from patients used in this paper include three dimensional, magnetic resonance angiograms (MRA), time-resolved phase contrast cardiac magnetic resonance images (4D-MRI) and sphygmomanometer blood pressure measurements. The 4D-MRI images provide detailed insight into velocity and flow in vessels within the imaged region, but they cannot predict flow in the rest of the body, nor do they provide values of blood pressure. To remedy these limitations, this study combines the MRA, 4D-MRI, and pressure data with 1D fluid dynamics models to predict hemodynamics in the major systemic arteries, including the cerebral and gut vasculature. To study effects post-surgery we compare simulations for an HLHS patient with simulations for a matched control patient that has double outlet right ventricle (DORV) physiology with a native aorta. Our results show that the HLHS patient has hypertensive pressures in the brain as well as reduced flow to the gut. Wave-intensity analysis suggests that the HLHS patient has irregular circulatory function during light upright exercise conditions and that predicted wall-shear stresses are lower than normal, suggesting the HLHS patient may have hypertension.