Abstract

Preserved ejection fraction heart failure (HFpEF) can be treated by installing a shunt in the interatrial septum, which relieves excess pressure in the left atrium by allowing blood to flow from left to right. This technique has proven effective in clinical trials, but the details of the flow through the shunted heart are not well understood. The current study aims to collect quantitative data on the relationship between pressure and flow rate in such shunts. An in vitro, shunted double atrium flow phantom was fabricated and used to investigate the relationship between pressure drop and flow across an interatrial shunt. Flow rate was controlled and the resulting pressure drop across the shunt was measured for a variety of flow cases, including steady and pulsatile flow, flow rate waveforms typical of healthy and failing hearts, and low and high heart rates. The results show a positive relationship between shunt flow rate and pressure drop which is more pronounced in steady flow than in pulsatile flow. Increasing heart rate increases the time-averaged pressure drop across the shunt but not the maximum pressure drop. For steady-flow cases, large changes in pressure drop resulting from moderate changes in flow rate suggest a flow regime transition during parts of the cardiac cycle. Comparison of time-averaged pulsatile flow pressure measurements with steady-flow measurements and two analytical plate-orifice models suggests that none approximate pulsatile flow accurately. The flow rate/pressure drop relationship across an in vitro model of an interatrial shunt has been measured for a variety of physiologically relevant cases. Among other things, the results suggest that steady flow approximations to the heart's pulsatile flow should be used with caution and simplified theoretical models do not approximate the flow rate/pressure drop relationship accurately.

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