4.1 Article

Flow Dynamics in a Model of a Left Ventricle with Different Mitral Valve Orientations

Journal

FLUIDS
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/fluids6120428

Keywords

mitral valve; left ventricular flow; cardiac flow; transmitral flow; mitral valve replacement; vortex rings

Funding

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

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The formation of vortex rings at valve leaflets during ventricular inflow has been studied with different annulus angles for the mitral valve. In the unhealthy case, circulation was reversed and energy dissipation was highest in the slightly angled case. The healthy case resulted in the least amount of stasis and was most effective in minimizing particle residence time.
The formation of vortex rings at valve leaflets during ventricular inflow has been a topic of interest for many years. It is generally accepted nowadays that the purpose of vortex rings is to conserve energy, reduce the workload on the heart, and minimize particle residence time. We investigated these claims by testing three different levels of annulus angle for the mitral valve: a healthy case, a slightly angled case (20 degrees), and a highly angled case (46 degrees). Circulation was determined to be reversed in the non-healthy case, with a dominant counterclockwise rotation instead of clockwise. Viscous energy dissipation was highest in the slightly angled case, followed by the healthy case and then the highly angled case. A Lagrangian analysis demonstrated that the healthy case resulted in the least amount of stasis, requiring eight cardiac cycles to evacuate 99% of initial ventricle volume compared to the 16 and 13 cardiac cycles required by the slightly angled and highly angled cases, respectively.

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