Abstract

Every year, a quarter million patients receive prosthetic heart valves in aortic valve replacement therapy. Prosthetic heart valves are known to lead to turbulent blood flow. This turbulent flow field may have adverse effects on blood itself, on the aortic wall and on the valve performance. A detailed characterization of the turbulent flow downstream of a valve could yield better understanding of its effect on shear-induced thrombocyte activation, unphysiological wall shear stresses and hemodynamic valve performance. Therefore, computational simulations of the flow past a bioprosthetic heart valve were performed. The computational results were validated against experimental measurements of the turbulent flow field with tomographic particle image velocimetry. The turbulent flow was analyzed for disturbance amplitudes, dissipation rates and shear stress distributions. It was found that approximately 26% of the hydrodynamic resistance of the valve was due to turbulent dissipation and that this dissipation mainly took place in a region about one valve diameter downstream of the valve orifice. Farther downstream, the turbulent fluctuations became weaker which was also reflected in the turbulent velocity spectra of the flow field. Viscous shear stresses were found to be in the range of the critical level for blood platelet activation. The turbulent flow led to elevated shear stress levels along the wall of the ascending aorta with strongly fluctuating and chaotic wall shear stress patterns. Further, we identified leaflet fluttering at 40 Hz which was connected to repeated shedding of vortex rings that appeared to feed the turbulent flow downstream of the valve.

Highlights

  • Aortic valve replacement (AVR) is a common therapy for moderate to severe aortic stenosis (Kheradvar et al, 2015)

  • Given that the limited resolution of these particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements probably led to an underestimation of the strain rates, these results indicate that the turbulent flow behind biological heart valve prostheses (BHV) may lead to platelet activation

  • The flow field exhibited a fully developed turbulent flow indicating rapid laminar-turbulent transition of the aortic jet and the vortex rings

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Summary

Introduction

Aortic valve replacement (AVR) is a common therapy for moderate to severe aortic stenosis (Kheradvar et al, 2015). Heart valve prostheses are known to create turbulent flow in the aortic root (AR) and the ascending aorta (AAo) (Sotiropoulos et al, 2016). This turbulent flow may be connected to blood platelet activation triggering thrombus formation (Quinlan and Dooley, 2007). Turbulent dissipation contributes to the pressure drop across the valve (clinically known as trans-valvular pressure gradient, TVPG). Hydrodynamic instabilities and turbulent flow past BHVs are important phenomena which may be directly linked to clinically adverse events, and it may be advisable to design prostheses which lead to less turbulent flow

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