4.1 Article

On Left Ventricle Stroke Work Efficiency in Children with Moderate Aortic Valve Regurgitation or Moderate Aortic Valve Stenosis

Journal

PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 45-53

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00246-021-02690-2

Keywords

Moderate aortic valve disease; Moderate aortic stenosis; Moderate aortic regurgitation; Mathematical modeling; Left ventricle energy performance

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [343164-07]

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The optimal timing for management of pediatric patients with moderate aortic valve disease remains unknown. A new evaluative parameter of LV performance, LVSW efficiency, may offer a promising avenue for future stratification of mixed aortic valve disease for optimal timing of management and intervention. Patients with moderate aortic valve disease have significantly reduced LV performance and may require careful myocardial assessment for timely intervention.
The optimal timing for management of pediatric patients with moderate aortic valve disease [moderate aortic stenosis (modAS) or moderate aortic regurgitation (modAR)] remains unknown and largely unexplored. Although usually asymptomatic, the risk of increased left ventricular (LV) wall stress, irreversible myocardial fibrosis and sudden death in untreated moderate conditions warrants clearer risk stratification for appropriate timely intervention. In this study, we explore the use of a patient-specific mathematical model to introduce a new evaluative parameter of LV performance in patients with moderate aortic valve disease. Synthetic patient data (N = 520) representing healthy patients, and patients with modAS or modAR were first generated. Then, data from twenty-five pediatric patients were included in this study (healthy = 9; moderate AS = 8; modAR = 8). The effect of modAS or modAR on LV performance was evaluated by LV stroke work (LVSW) efficiency, a new non-invasive parameter. The results demonstrate that healthy patients possess a very high LVSW efficiency (synthetic data: 91 +/- 2%, in vivo data: 92 +/- 3%). However, modAS patients have a significant reduction in LVSW efficiency (synthetic data: 78 +/- 2%, in vivo data: 76 +/- 5%, p < 0.05), whereas modAR patients had the lowest LVSW efficiency (synthetic data: 58 +/- 3%, in vivo data: 66 +/- 7%; p < 0.05). This highlights that patients with moderate aortic valve disease require careful myocardial assessment, regardless of onset of clinical symptoms as their LV performance is significantly reduced. The evaluation of LVSW efficiency offers a promising avenue for future stratification of mixed aortic valve disease for optimal timing of management and intervention.

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