4.6 Article

Isolating the Effect of Arch Architecture on Aortic Hemodynamics Late After Coarctation Repair: A Computational Study

Journal

FRONTIERS IN CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2022.855118

Keywords

aortic coarctation; aortic hemodynamics; computational modeling; computational fluid dynamics; power loss; wall shear stress

Funding

  1. University of Bristol
  2. British Heart Foundation
  3. Bristol NIHR Biomedical Research Center (BRC)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study used computational simulations to analyze the relationship between aortic shape and hemodynamic parameters. The results showed that even small alterations in aortic morphology can impact key hemodynamic indices, which may explain phenomena such as persistent hypertension in the absence of any clinically significant narrowing. The findings suggest that the geometry of the aortic arch may be a contributing factor to cardiovascular events in patients with aortic coarctation.
ObjectivesEffective management of aortic coarctation (CoA) affects long-term cardiovascular outcomes. Full appreciation of CoA hemodynamics is important. This study aimed to analyze the relationship between aortic shape and hemodynamic parameters by means of computational simulations, purposely isolating the morphological variable. MethodsComputational simulations were run in three aortic models. MRI-derived aortic geometries were generated using a statistical shape modeling methodology. Starting from n = 108 patients, the mean aortic configuration was derived in patients without CoA (n = 37, no-CoA), with surgically repaired CoA (n = 58, r-CoA) and with unrepaired CoA (n = 13, CoA). As such, the aortic models represented average configurations for each scenario. Key hemodynamic parameters (i.e., pressure drop, aortic velocity, vorticity, wall shear stress WSS, and length and number of strong flow separations in the descending aorta) were measured in the three models at three time points (peak systole, end systole, end diastole). ResultsComparing no-CoA and CoA revealed substantial differences in all hemodynamic parameters. However, simulations revealed significant increases in vorticity at the site of CoA repair, higher WSS in the descending aorta and a 12% increase in power loss, in r-CoA compared to no-CoA, despite no clinically significant narrowing (CoA index >0.8) in the r-CoA model. ConclusionsSmall alterations in aortic morphology impact on key hemodynamic indices. This may contribute to explaining phenomena such as persistent hypertension in the absence of any clinically significant narrowing. Whilst cardiovascular events in these patients may be related to hypertension, the role of arch geometry may be a contributory factor.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available