4.0 Article

Dynamic particle image velocimetry study of the aortic flow field of contemporary mechanical bileaflet prostheses

Journal

JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL ORGANS
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 75-90

Publisher

SPRINGER TOKYO
DOI: 10.1007/s10047-008-0410-y

Keywords

prosthetic heart valve; dynamic PIV; flow visualization; biofluid mechanics; medical equipment

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The characteristics of mechanical bileaflet valves, the leaflets of which open at the outside first, differ significantly from those of natural valves, whose leaflets open at the center first, and this fact affects the flow field down-stream of the valves. The direction of jet-type flows, which is influenced by this difference in valve features, and the existence of the sinus of Valsalva both affect the flow field inside the aorta in different ways, depending on the valve design. There may also be an influence on the coronary circulation, the entrance to which resides inside the sinus of Valsalva. A dynamic particle image velocimetry (PIV) study was conducted to analyze the influence of the design of prosthetic heart valves on the aortic flow field. Three contemporary bileaflet prostheses, the St. Jude Medical (SJM) valve, the On-X valve (with straight leaflets), and the MIRA valve (with curved leaflets), were tested inside a simulated aorta under pulsatile flow conditions. A dynamic PIV system was employed to analyze the aortic flow field resulting from the different valve designs. The two newer valves, the On-X and the MIRA valves, open more quickly than the SJM valve and provide a wider opening area when the valve is fully open. The SJM valve's outer orifices deflect the flow during the accelerating flow phase, whereas the newer designs deflect the flow less. The flow through the central orifice of the SJM valve has a lower velocity compared to the newer designs; the newer designs tend to have a strong flow through all orifices. The On-X valve generates a simple jet-type flow, whereas the MIRA valve (with circumferentially curved leaflets) generates a strong but three-dimensionally diffuse flow, resulting in a more complex flow field downstream of the aortic valve. The clinically more adapted 180 degrees orientation seems to provide a less diffuse flow than the 90 degrees orientation does. The small differences in leaflet design in the bileaflet valves generate noticeable differences in the aortic flow; the newer valves show strong flows through all orifices.

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