4.5 Article

Fragmentation of Different Calcification Growth Patterns in Bicuspid Valves During Balloon Valvuloplasty Procedure

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 51, Issue 5, Pages 1014-1027

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-022-03115-8

Keywords

Reverse Calcification Technique (RCT); Bicuspid aortic valve (BAV); Calcific aortic valve disease (CAVD); Balloon valvuloplasty procedure; Calcification fragmentation

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This study investigates the calcification development and routes of type-1 bicuspid aortic valves based on CT scans and analyzes the impact of the unique geometrical shapes of calcium deposits on their fragmentation under balloon valvuloplasty procedures. It introduces a reverse calcification technique to predict calcification progression and identifies two main calcification patterns. Additionally, a calcification fragmentation biomechanical model is proposed to study the effect of balloon valvuloplasty on different calcification patterns.
This study focuses on the calcification development and routes of type-1 bicuspid aortic valves based on CT scans and the effect of the unique geometrical shapes of calcium deposits on their fragmentation under balloon valvuloplasty procedures. Towards this goal, the novel Reverse Calcification Technique (RCT), which can predict the calcification progression leading to the current state based on CT scans, is utilized for n = 26 bicuspid aortic valves patients. Two main calcification patterns of type-1 bicuspid aortic valves were identified; asymmetric and symmetric with either partial or full arcs and circles. Subsequently, a calcification fragmentation biomechanical model was introduced to study the balloon valvuloplasty procedure prior to transcatheter aortic valve replacement implantation that allows better device expansion. To achieve this goal, six representative stenotic bicuspid aortic valves of different calcification patterns were investigated. It was found that the distinct geometrical shape of the calcium deposits had a significant effect on the cracks' initiations. Full or partial circle deposits had stronger resistance to fragmentation and mainly remained intact, yet, arc-shaped pattern deposits resulted in multiple cracks in bottleneck regions. The proposed biomechanical computational models could help assess calcification fragmentation patterns toward improving treatment approaches in stenotic bicuspid aortic valve patients, particularly for the off-label use of transcatheter aortic valve replacement.

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