4.6 Article

Reducing Morbidity and Mortality in Patients With Coarctation Requires Systematic Differentiation of Impacts of Mixed Valvular Disease on Coarctation Hemodynamics

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.121.022664

Keywords

aortic fluid dynamics; coarctation; global hemodynamics; left ventricle metrics; local hemodynamics; mixed valvular disease

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council [RGPIN-2017-05349, RGPIN-2020-04549, DGECR-2020-00204]
  2. University of Calgary [URGC SEM 105434]

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The study showed that COA and mixed valvular diseases interacted to worsen abnormal blood flow dynamics and increase disease progression. Additionally, the presence of valvular diseases in patients led to increased workload, highlighting the importance of considering both COA severity and mixed valvular diseases in patient evaluation and treatment planning.
Background Despite ongoing advances in surgical techniques for coarctation of the aorta (COA) repair, the long-term results are not always benign. Associated mixed valvular diseases (various combinations of aortic and mitral valvular pathologies) are responsible for considerable postoperative morbidity and mortality. We investigated the impact of COA and mixed valvular diseases on hemodynamics. Methods and Results We developed a patient-specific computational framework. Our results demonstrate that mixed valvular diseases interact with COA fluid dynamics and contribute to speed up the progression of the disease by amplifying the irregular flow patterns downstream of COA (local) and exacerbating the left ventricular function (global) (N=26). Velocity downstream of COA with aortic regurgitation alone was increased, and the situation got worse when COA and aortic regurgitation coexisted with mitral regurgitation (COA with normal valves: 5.27 m/s, COA with only aortic regurgitation: 8.8 m/s, COA with aortic and mitral regurgitation: 9.36 m/s; patient 2). Workload in these patients was increased because of the presence of aortic stenosis alone, aortic regurgitation alone, mitral regurgitation alone, and when they coexisted (COA with normal valves: 1.0617 J; COA with only aortic stenosis: 1.225 J; COA with only aortic regurgitation: 1.6512 J; COA with only mitral regurgitation: 1.3599 J; patient 1). Conclusions Not only the severity of COA, but also the presence and the severity of mixed valvular disease should be considered in the evaluation of risks in patients. The results suggest that more aggressive surgical approaches may be required, because regularly chosen current surgical techniques may not be optimal for such patients.

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