Abstract

Left ventricular assist device (LVAD) has been saving many lives in patients with severe left ventricular (LV) failure. Recently, a minimally invasive transvascular LVAD such as Impella enables us to support unstable hemodynamics in severely ill patients. Although LVAD support increases total LV cardiac output (COTLV) at the expense of decreases in the native LV cardiac output (CONLV), the underlying mechanism determining COTLV remains unestablished. This study aims to clarify the mechanism and develop a framework to predict COTLV under known LVAD flow (COLVAD). We previously developed a generalized framework of circulatory equilibrium that consists of the integrated CO curve and the VR surface as common functions of right atrial pressure (PRA) and left atrial pressure (PLA). The intersection between the integrated CO curve and the VR surface defines circulatory equilibrium. Incorporating LVAD into this framework indicated that LVAD increases afterload, which in turn decreases CONLV. The total LV cardiac output (COTLV) under LVAD support becomes COTLV = CONLV+EFe · COLVAD, where EFe is effective ejection fraction, i.e., Ees/(Ees+Ea). Ees and Ea represent LV end-systolic elastance (Ees) and effective arterial elastance (Ea), respectively. In other words, LVAD shifts the total LV cardiac output curve upward by EFe · COLVAD. In contrast, LVAD does not change the VR surface or the right ventricular CO curve. In six anesthetized dogs, we created LV failure by the coronary ligation of the left anterior descending artery and inserted LVAD by withdrawing blood from LV and pumping out to the femoral artery. We determined the parameters of the CO curve with a volume-change technique. We then changed the COLVAD stepwise from 0 to 70–100 ml/kg/min and predicted hemodynamics by using the proposed circulatory equilibrium. Predicted COTLV, PRA, and PLA for each step correlated well with those measured (SEE; 2.8 ml/kg/min 0.17 mmHg, and 0.65 mmHg, respectively, r2; 0.993, 0.993, and 0.965, respectively). The proposed framework quantitatively predicted the upward-shift of the total CO curve resulting from the synergistic effect of LV systolic function and LVAD support. The proposed framework can contribute to the safe management of patients with LVAD.

Highlights

  • Heart failure is one of the most challenging cardiac pathophysiologies, and the survival rate remains unacceptably poor despite the guideline-recommended optimal medical therapy [1]

  • We previously reported the impact of total Left ventricular assist device (LVAD) support, i.e., no LV ejection through the aortic valve, on hemodynamics by using the framework of circulatory equilibrium in an animal model of acute heart failure [12]

  • To overcome the limitations of Guyton’s circulatory equilibrium, we developed a generalized framework of circulatory equilibrium that consists of the integrated CO curve and the venous returning (VR) surface as common functions of PRA and left atrial pressure (PLA) [15]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Heart failure is one of the most challenging cardiac pathophysiologies, and the survival rate remains unacceptably poor despite the guideline-recommended optimal medical therapy [1]. Heart transplantation strikingly improves the quality of life and prolongs survival in patients with end-stage heart failure, the number of donor’s hearts is disproportionally small [2]. Heart transplantation cannot serve as a standard therapeutic modality for every patient with end-stage heart failure. Klotz et al reported that, even in end-stage heart failure, LVAD could reverse ventricular remodeling. They argued that mechanical LV unloading improves neurohormonal/cytokine milieu and reverses LV remodeling [6]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.