4.5 Article

On the Left Ventricular Remodeling of Patients with Stenotic Aortic Valve: A Statistical Shape Analysis

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering8050066

Keywords

left ventricle; aortic valve stenosis; statistical shape analysis

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health [GR-2011-02348129]

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The left ventricle undergoes remodeling in response to aortic stenosis, and statistical shape analysis can quantitatively visualize geometric and functional patterns in LV changes. Shape modes are positively correlated with LV volume, providing insights into LV impairment. The predictive model built with shape modes shows better performance in predicting adverse events compared to using clinical demographic data alone. This study demonstrates the potential of SSA approaches in detecting complex 3D shape features associated with LV function.
The left ventricle (LV) constantly changes its shape and function as a response to pathological conditions, and this process is known as remodeling. In the presence of aortic stenosis (AS), the degenerative process is not limited to the aortic valve but also involves the remodeling of LV. Statistical shape analysis (SSA) offers a powerful tool for the visualization and quantification of the geometrical and functional patterns of any anatomic changes. In this paper, a SSA method was developed to determine shape descriptors of the LV under different degrees of AS and thus to shed light on the mechanistic link between shape and function. A total of n=86 patients underwent computed tomography (CT) for the evaluation of valvulopathy were segmented to obtain the LV surface and then were automatically aligned to a reference template by rigid registrations and transformations. Shape modes of the anatomical LV variation induced by the degree of AS were assessed by principal component analysis (PCA). The first shape mode represented nearly 50% of the total variance of LV shape in our patient population and was mainly associated to a spherical LV geometry. At Pearson's analysis, the first shape mode was positively correlated to both the end-diastolic volume (p<0.01, R=0.814) and end-systolic volume (p<0.01, and R=0.922), suggesting LV impairment in patients with severe AS. A predictive model built with PCA-related shape modes achieved better performance in stratifying the occurrence of adverse events with respect to a baseline model using clinical demographic data as risk predictors. This study demonstrated the potential of SSA approaches to detect the association of complex 3D shape features with functional LV parameters.

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