Abstract

Valvular heart diseases are a prevalent cause of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality worldwide, affecting a wide spectrum of the population. In-silico modeling of the cardiovascular system has recently gained recognition as a useful tool in cardiovascular research and clinical applications. Here, we present an in-silico cardiac computational model to analyze the effect and severity of valvular disease on general hemodynamic parameters. We propose a multimodal and multiscale cardiovascular model to simulate and understand the progression of valvular disease associated with the mitral valve. The developed model integrates cardiac electrophysiology with hemodynamic modeling, thus giving a broader and holistic understanding of the effect of disease progression on various parameters like ejection fraction, cardiac output, blood pressure, etc., to assess the severity of mitral valve disorders, naming Mitral Stenosis and Mitral Regurgitation. The model mimics an adult cardiovascular system, comprising a four-chambered heart with systemic, pulmonic circulation. The simulation of the model output comprises regulated pressure, volume, and flow for each heart chamber, valve dynamics, and Photoplethysmogram signal for normal physiological as well as pathological conditions due to mitral valve disorders. The generated physiological parameters are in agreement with published data. Additionally, we have related the simulated left atrium and ventricle dimensions, with the enlargement and hypertrophy in the cardiac chambers of patients with mitral valve disorders, using their Electrocardiogram available in Physionet PTBI dataset. The model also helps to create ‘what if’ scenarios and relevant analysis to study the effect in different hemodynamic parameters for stress or exercise like conditions.

Highlights

  • Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) account for a massive rate of mortality all over the world

  • We report the development of a multiscale-multimodal cardiac model to capture the changes in hemodynamics due to mitral valve disorders

  • The proposed approach couples electrophysiology with hemodynamics, enhancing a holistic understanding of underlying pathophysiological changes associated with mitral valve stenosis and regurgitation

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) account for a massive rate of mortality all over the world. Recent statistics from World Health Organization (WHO) reported nearly 17.9 million death due to cardiovascular disease along with the economic burden of billions of dollars spent every year on screening, diagnosis, and related health-care-associated to CVD [1]. Simulating multimodal cardiovascular system support in the form of salaries for all the authors and provided infrastructural support for research and development, data analysis, decision to publish and preparation of the manuscript. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials. There are no patents, products in development or marketed products associated with this research to declare

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