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1.
Failure of bioprosthetic and synthetic three-leaflet valves has been shown to occur as a consequence of high tensile and bending stresses, acting on the leaflets during opening and closing. Moreover, in the stented prostheses, whether synthetic or biological, the absence of contraction of the aortic base, due to the rigid stent, causes the leaflets to be subjected to an unphysiological degree of flexure, which is related to calcification. It is shown that the absence of the stent, which gives a flexible aortic base and leaflet attachment, and leaflet fibre-reinforcement result in reduced stresses in the weaker parts of the leaflets in their closed configuration. It is postulated that this leads to a decrease of tears and perforations, which may result in a improved long-term behaviour. The effect of a flexible leaflet attachment and aortic base of a synthetic valve is investigated with a finite element model. Different fibre-reinforced structures are analysed with respect to the stresses that are likely to contribute to the failure of fibre-reinforced prostheses and compared with the results obtained for a stented prosthesis. Results show that for the stentless models a reduction of stresses up to 75% is obtained with respect to stented models with the same type of reinforcement.  相似文献   

2.
In this paper, a finite element analysis of the stress distribution on the cusps of a polyurethane trileaflet heart valve prosthesis in the closed position is presented. The geometry of the valve was modified from a relationship proposed by Ghista and Reul (J. Biomechanics 10, 313-324, 1977). The effects of variations in stent height, leaflet thickness and coaptation area on the stress distribution were also analyzed. Analyses were performed with both rigid and flexible stents for the trileaflet valve in order to delineate the effect of stent flexibility on the leaflet stress distribution. The results showed that regions of stress concentration were present near the commissural attachment similar to those predicted with the bioprostheses. The stresses on the leaflets were reduced by increasing the stent height with both rigid and flexible stents. Selectively increasing the leaflet thickness near the commissures and also increasing the coaptation area did not prove to reduce the leaflet stresses when the stent flexibility was taken into account. The possible effect of high stresses on the structural integrity of polyurethane leaflets and its relationship with calcification is yet to be investigated.  相似文献   

3.
One of the major failure modes of bioprosthetic heart valves (BHVs) is noncalcific structural deterioration due to fatigue of the tissue leaflets; yet, the mechanisms of fatigue are not well understood. BHV durability is primarily assessed based on visual inspection of the leaflets following accelerated wear testing. In this study, we developed a computational framework to simulate BHV leaflet fatigue, which is both efficient and quantitative, making it an attractive alternative to traditional accelerated wear testing. We utilize a phenomenological soft tissue fatigue damage model developed previously to describe the stress softening and permanent set of the glutaraldehyde-treated bovine pericardium leaflets in BHVs subjected to cyclic loading. A parametric study was conducted to determine the effects of altered leaflet and stent elastic properties on the fatigue of the leaflets. The simulation results show that heterogeneity of the leaflet elastic properties, poor leaflet coaptation, and little stent-tip deflection may accelerate leaflet fatigue, which agrees with clinical findings. Therefore, the developed framework may be an invaluable tool for evaluating leaflet durability in new tissue valve designs, including traditional BHVs as well as new transcatheter valves.  相似文献   

4.
Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is a safe and effective treatment option for patients deemed at high and intermediate risk for surgical aortic valve replacement. Similar to surgical aortic valves (SAVs), transcatheter aortic valves (TAVs) undergo calcification and mechanical wear over time. However, to date, there have been limited publications on the long-term durability of TAV devices. To assess longevity and mechanical strength of TAVs in comparison to surgical bioprosthetic valves, three-dimensional deformation analysis and strain measurement of the leaflets become an inevitable part of the evaluation. The goal of this study was to measure and compare leaflet displacement and strain of two commonly used TAVs in a side-by-side comparison with a commonly used SAV using a high-resolution digital image correlation (DIC) system. 26-mm Edwards SAPIEN 3, 26-mm Medtronic CoreValve, and 25-mm Carpentier-Edwards PERIMOUNT Magna surgical bioprosthesis were examined in a custom-made valve testing apparatus. A time-varying, spatially uniform pressure was applied to the leaflets at different loading rates. GOM ARAMIS® software was used to map leaflet displacement and strain fields during loading and unloading. High displacement regions were found to be at the leaflet belly region of the three bioprosthetic valves. In addition, the frame of the surgical bioprosthesis was found to be remarkably flexible, in contrary to CoreValve and SAPIEN 3 in which the stent was nearly rigid under a similar loading condition. The experimental DIC measurements can be used to characterize the anisotropic materiel behavior of the bioprosthetic heart valve leaflets and validate heart valve computational simulations.  相似文献   

5.
A two-dimensional finite element analysis of a bioprosthetic heart valve   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A finite element scheme has been developed using total Lagrangian techniques for the two-dimensional analysis of bioprosthetic heart valve leaflets undergoing large deformation. Two models of a leaflet, namely a radial and a circumferential slice, have been analysed. The attachment of the slice to the stent was simulated by progressive contact on a circular former and the coaptation of the leaflets in the centre of a heart valve by a straight line of contact. For the circumferential model, different initial configurations have been considered. The prolapse pressure under which the heart valve closes has been shown to be small in comparison with the normal pressure a heart valve sustains. The regions of the valve that are most heavily stressed are subjected to a strong component of bending. The amount is sensitive to the details of the boundary conditions and to the initial configuration of the valve. These observations are likely to be significant in the use of this kind of stress analysis to improve the design of this type of valve.  相似文献   

6.
Bovine pericardium, stabilized with glutaraldehyde, is used widely in the construction of heart valve substitutes, but the design and construction of valve substitutes from this material are empirically based. Collagenous tissue can support tension, but experimental evidence indicates that flexure-induced compressive stresses can lead to fatigue failure. This study uses experimental results obtained from cyclic uniaxial load tests to predict the type and magnitude of operational stresses which occur in pericardial heterograft leaflets. Both Young's modulus and Poisson's ratio varied with uniaxial loading in pericardium, chemically modified free of tension. Leaflet stresses were analysed by using effective incremental representations of these parameters. In leaflets with unrestricted rotation at the point of attachment to the stent, the mid-plane tensions always exceeded the bending stresses, and no zones of leaflet compression were predicted. In contrast, with totally restricted leaflet rotation induced by clamping (possibly between a male and female frame) the bending stresses were greater than the mid-plane tensions at the hinge line and significant compressive stresses were predicted at this site. If elastic boundary conditions were introduced at the stent (possibly by wrapping the stent in pericardium) then the compressive stresses were reduced as the degree of elasticity was increased. Glutaraldehyde fixation of the pericardium under load produced a stiffer material; higher compressive stresses at the stent and significant increases in total stress were predicted for this tissue. The application of elevated pressure loading also increased the compressive and total stresses in the leaflet. Finally, it was shown that bicuspid leaflets were likely to experience higher stresses than tricuspid leaflets. This simple stress analysis should help valve designers of pericardial heterografts to identify those conditions which lead to tissue compression, high total stress, and ultimately material fatigue.  相似文献   

7.
Functional analysis of bioprosthetic heart valves   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Glutaraldehyde-treated bovine pericardium is used successfully as bioprosthetic material in the manufacturing of heart valves leaflets. The mechanical properties of bovine pericardial aortic valve leaflets seem to influence its mechanical behaviour and the failure mechanisms. In this study the effect of orthotropy on tricuspid bioprosthetic aortic valve was analysed, using a three-dimensional finite element model, during the entire cardiac cycle. Multiaxial tensile tests were also performed to determine the anisotropy of pericardium. Seven different models of the same valve were analysed using different values of mechanical characteristics from one leaflet to another, considering pericardium as an orthotropic material. The results showed that even a small difference between values along the two axes of orthotropy can negatively influence leaflets performance as regard both displacement and stress distribution. Leaflets of bovine pericardium bioprostheses could be manufactured to be similar to natural human heart valves reproducing their well-known anisotropy. In this way it could be possible to improve the manufacturing process, durability and function of pericardial bioprosthetic valves.  相似文献   

8.
Synthetic leaflet heart valves have been widely studied as possible alternatives to the current mechanical and bioprosthetic valves. Assessing the in vitro hydrodynamic function of these prostheses is of great importance to predict their hemodynamic behaviour prior to implantation. This study introduces an innovative concept of a low-profile semi-stented surgical aortic valve (SSAV) made of a novel nanocomposite polyurethane with a polycarbonate soft segment (PCU) and polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (POSS) nanoparticles covalently bonded as a pendant cage to the hard segment. The POSS–PCU is already used in surgical implants, including lacrimal duct, bypass graft, and recently, a tracheal replacement. Nine valves of three leaflet thicknesses (100, 150 and 200 μm) and 21 mm internal diameter were prepared using an automated dip-coating procedure, and assessed in vitro for their hydrodynamic performance on a pulse duplicator system. A commercially available porcine bioprosthetic valve (Epic?, St. Jude Medical) of equivalent size was selected as a control model. Compared to the bioprosthetic valve, the SSAVs showed a considerably lower transvalvular pressure drop and larger effective orifice area (EOA). They were also characterised by a lower systolic energy loss, especially at high cardiac outputs. The leaflet thickness was found to significantly affect the hydrodynamics of these valves (P<0.01). The SSAVs with 100 μm leaflets demonstrated improved flow characteristics compared to the bioprosthetic valve. The enhanced hydrodynamic function of the SSAV suggests that the proposed design together with the advanced POSS–PCU material can represent a significant step towards the introduction of polyurethane valves into the clinical application.  相似文献   

9.
While providing nearly trouble-free function for 10-12 years, current bioprosthetic heart valves (BHV) continue to suffer from limited long-term durability. This is usually a result of leaflet calcification and/or structural degeneration, which may be related to regions of stress concentration associated with complex leaflet deformations. In the current work, a dynamic three-dimensional finite element analysis of a pericardial BHV was performed with a recently developed FE implementation of the generalized nonlinear anisotropic Fung-type elastic constitutive model for pericardial BHV tissues (W. Sun and M.S. Sacks, 2005, [Biomech. Model. Mechanobiol., 4(2-3), pp. 190-199]). The pericardial BHV was subjected to time-varying physiological pressure loading to compute the deformation and stress distribution during the opening phase of the valve function. A dynamic sequence of the displacements revealed that the free edge of the leaflet reached the fully open position earlier and the belly region followed. Asymmetry was observed in the resulting displacement and stress distribution due to the fiber direction and the anisotropic characteristics of the Fung-type elastic constitutive material model. The computed stress distribution indicated relatively high magnitudes near the free edge of the leaflet with local bending deformation and subsequently at the leaflet attachment boundary. The maximum computed von Mises stress during the opening phase was 33.8 kPa. The dynamic analysis indicated that the free edge regions of the leaflets were subjected to significant flexural deformation that may potentially lead to structural degeneration after millions of cycles of valve function. The regions subjected to time varying flexural deformation and high stresses of the present study also correspond to regions of tissue valve calcification and structural failure reported from explanted valves. In addition, the present simulation also demonstrated the importance of including the bending component together with the in-plane material behavior of the leaflets towards physiologically realistic deformation of the leaflets. Dynamic simulations with experimentally determined leaflet material specification can be potentially used to modify the valve towards an optimal design to minimize regions of stress concentration and structural failure.  相似文献   

10.
This study presents a three-dimensional finite element model of the mitral apparatus using a hyperelastic transversely isotropic material model for the leaflets. The objectives of this study are to illustrate the effects of the annulus shape on the chordal force distribution and on the mitral valve response during systole, to investigate the role of the anterior secondary (strut) chordae and to study the influence of thickness of the leaflets on the leaflets stresses. Hence, analyses are conducted with a moving and fixed saddle shaped annulus and with and without anterior secondary chordae. We found that the tension in the secondary chordae represents 31% of the load carried by the papillary muscles. When removing the anterior secondary chordae, the tension in the primary anterior chordae is almost doubled, the displacement of the anterior leaflet toward the left atrium is also increased. The moving annulus configuration with an increasing annulus saddle height does not give significant changes in the chordal force distribution and in the leaflet stress compared to the fixed annulus. The results also show that the maximum principle stresses in the anterior leaflet are carried by the collagen fibers. The stresses calculated in the leaflets are very sensitive to the thickness employed.  相似文献   

11.
Aortic valve reconstruction using leaflet grafts made from autologous pericardium is an effective surgical treatment for some forms of aortic regurgitation. Despite favorable outcomes in the hands of skilled surgeons, the procedure is underutilized because of the difficulty of sizing grafts to effectively seal with the native leaflets. Difficulty is largely due to the complex geometry and function of the valve and the lower distensibility of the graft material relative to native leaflet tissue. We used a structural finite element model to explore how a pericardial leaflet graft of various sizes interacts with two native leaflets when the valve is closed and loaded. Native leaflets and pericardium are described by anisotropic, hyperelastic constitutive laws, and we model all three leaflets explicitly and resolve leaflet contact in order to simulate repair strategies that are asymmetrical with respect to valve geometry and leaflet properties. We ran simulations with pericardial leaflet grafts of various widths (increase of 0%, 7%, 14%, 21% and 27%) and heights (increase of 0%, 13%, 27% and 40%) relative to the native leaflets. Effectiveness of valve closure was quantified based on the overlap between coapting leaflets. Results showed that graft width and height must both be increased to achieve proper valve closure, and that a graft 21% wider and 27% higher than the native leaflet creates a seal similar to a valve with three normal leaflets. Experimental validation in excised porcine aortas (n=9) corroborates the results of simulations.  相似文献   

12.
In some cases of aortic valve leaflet disease, the implant of a stentless biological prosthesis represents an excellent option for aortic valve replacement (AVR). In particular, if compared with the implant of mechanical valves, it provides a more physiological haemodynamic performance and a reduced thrombogeneticity, avoiding the use of anticoagulants. The clinical outcomes of AVR are strongly dependent on an appropriate choice of both prosthesis size and replacement technique, which is, at present, strictly related to surgeon's experience and skill. This represents the motivation for patient-specific finite element analysis able to virtually reproduce stentless valve implantation. With the aim of performing reliable patient-specific simulations, we remark that, on the one hand, it is not well established in the literature whether bioprosthetic leaflet tissue is isotropic or anisotropic; on the other hand, it is of fundamental importance to incorporate an accurate material model to realistically predict post-operative performance. Within this framework, using a novel computational methodology to simulate stentless valve implantation, we test the impact of using different material models on both the stress pattern and post-operative coaptation parameters (i.e. coaptation area, length and height). As expected, the simulation results suggest that the material properties of the valve leaflets affect significantly the post-operative prosthesis performance.  相似文献   

13.
This work was concerned with the numerical simulation of the behaviour of aortic valves whose material can be modelled as non-linear elastic anisotropic. Linear elastic models for the valve leaflets with parameters used in previous studies were compared with hyperelastic models, incorporating leaflet anisotropy with pronounced stiffness in the circumferential direction through a transverse isotropic model. The parameters for the hyperelastic models were obtained from fits to results of orthogonal uniaxial tensile tests on porcine aortic valve leaflets. The computational results indicated the significant impact of transverse isotropy and hyperelastic effects on leaflet mechanics; in particular, increased coaptation with peak values of stress and strain in the elastic limit. The alignment of maximum principal stresses in all models follows approximately the coarse collagen fibre distribution found in aortic valve leaflets. The non-linear elastic leaflets also demonstrated more evenly distributed stress and strain which appears relevant to long-term scaffold stability and mechanotransduction.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of storage temperature on viable bioprosthetic heart valves.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Long-term in vivo success of bioprosthetic allografts is dependent upon retention of cellular functions, such as protein synthesis. The purpose of the experiments presented in this report was to determine the storage conditions necessary for retention of protein synthetic functions in human allograft heart valve leaflets. Tissue viability was assessed by measurement of tritiated-glycine incorporation into proteins. Comparison of short-term (less than 3 month)- and long-term (1 and 2 years)-cryopreserved heart valve leaflet storage in a liquid nitrogen freezer below -135 degrees C demonstrated preservation of fibroblast protein synthesis. In contrast, storage in a mechanical freezer at -80 degrees C resulted in a time-dependent loss of fibroblast protein synthesis. There was no statistically significant effect on protein synthesis in leaflets stored for 1 week at 4 degrees C compared to control cryopreserved liquid nitrogen-stored leaflets. After 2 weeks of 4 degrees C storage leaflet protein synthesis declined significantly to 15% that of cryopreserved controls. These results demonstrate that liquid nitrogen storage of valve bioprostheses is required for long-term preservation of cellular functions.  相似文献   

15.
The bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) is a common congenital malformation of the aortic valve (AV) affecting 1% to 2% of the population. The BAV is predisposed to early degenerative calcification of valve leaflets, and BAV patients constitute 50% of AV stenosis patients. Although evidence shows that genetic defects can play a role in calcification of the BAV leaflets, we hypothesize that drastic changes in the mechanical environment of the BAV elicit pathological responses from the valve and might be concurrently responsible for early calcification. An in vitro model of the BAV was constructed by surgically manipulating a native trileaflet porcine AV. The BAV valve model and a trileaflet AV (TAV) model were tested in an in vitro pulsatile flow loop mimicking physiological hemodynamics. Laser Doppler velocimetry was used to make measurements of fluid shear stresses on the leaflet of the valve models using previously established methodologies. Furthermore, particle image velocimetry was used to visualize the flow fields downstream of the valves and in the sinuses. In the BAV model, flow near the leaflets and fluid shear stresses on the leaflets were much more unsteady than for the TAV model, most likely due to the moderate stenosis in the BAV and the skewed forward flow jet that collided with the aorta wall. This additional unsteadiness occurred during mid- to late-systole and was composed of cycle-to-cycle magnitude variability as well as high-frequency fluctuations about the mean shear stress. It has been demonstrated that the BAV geometry can lead to unsteady shear stresses under physiological flow and pressure conditions. Such altered shear stresses could play a role in accelerated calcification in BAVs.  相似文献   

16.
We measured leaflet displacements and used inverse finite-element analysis to define, for the first time, the material properties of mitral valve (MV) leaflets in vivo. Sixteen miniature radiopaque markers were sewn to the MV annulus, 16 to the anterior MV leaflet, and 1 on each papillary muscle tip in 17 sheep. Four-dimensional coordinates were obtained from biplane videofluoroscopic marker images (60 frames/s) during three complete cardiac cycles. A finite-element model of the anterior MV leaflet was developed using marker coordinates at the end of isovolumic relaxation (IVR; when the pressure difference across the valve is approximately 0), as the minimum stress reference state. Leaflet displacements were simulated during IVR using measured left ventricular and atrial pressures. The leaflet shear modulus (G(circ-rad)) and elastic moduli in both the commisure-commisure (E(circ)) and radial (E(rad)) directions were obtained using the method of feasible directions to minimize the difference between simulated and measured displacements. Group mean (+/-SD) values (17 animals, 3 heartbeats each, i.e., 51 cardiac cycles) were as follows: G(circ-rad) = 121 +/- 22 N/mm2, E(circ) = 43 +/- 18 N/mm2, and E(rad) = 11 +/- 3 N/mm2 (E(circ) > E(rad), P < 0.01). These values, much greater than those previously reported from in vitro studies, may result from activated neurally controlled contractile tissue within the leaflet that is inactive in excised tissues. This could have important implications, not only to our understanding of mitral valve physiology in the beating heart but for providing additional information to aid the development of more durable tissue-engineered bioprosthetic valves.  相似文献   

17.
In this work, we examine the dynamics of fluid flow in a mechanical heart valve when the solid inertia and leaflet compliance are important. The fluid is incompressible and Newtonian, and the leaflet is an incompressible neo-Hookean material. In the case of an inertialess leaflet, we find that the maximum valve opening angle and the time that the valve remains closed increase as the shear modulus of the leaflet decreases. More importantly, the regurgitant volume decreases with decreasing shear modulus. When we examined the forces exerted on the leaflet, we found that the downward motion of the leaflet is initiated by a vertical force exerted on its right side and, later on, by a vertical force exerted on the top side of the leaflet. In the case of solid inertia, we find that the maximum valve opening angle and the regurgitant volume are larger than in the case of an inertialess leaflet. These results highlight the importance of solid compliance in the dynamics of blood flow in a mechanical heart valve. More importantly, they indicate that mechanical heart valves with compliant leaflets may have smaller regurgitant volumes and smaller shear stresses than the ones with rigid leaflets.  相似文献   

18.
The mitral valve is a highly heterogeneous tissue composed of two leaflets, anterior and posterior, whose unique composition and regional differences in material properties are essential to overall valve function. While mitral valve mechanics have been studied for many decades, traditional testing methods limit the spatial resolution of measurements and can be destructive. Optical coherence elastography (OCE) is an emerging method for measuring viscoelastic properties of tissues in a noninvasive, nondestructive manner. In this study, we employed air-pulse OCE to measure the spatial variation in mitral valve elastic properties with micro-scale resolution at 1 mm increments along the radial length of the leaflets. We analyzed differences between the leaflets, as well as between regions of the valve. We found that the anterior leaflet has a higher elastic wave velocity, which is reported as a surrogate for stiffness, than the posterior leaflet, most notably at the annular edge of the sample. In addition, we found a spatial elastic gradient in the anterior leaflet, where the annular edge was found to have a greater elastic wave velocity than the free edge. This gradient was less pronounced in the posterior leaflet. These patterns were confirmed using established uniaxial tensile testing methods. Overall, the anterior leaflet was stiffer and had greater heterogeneity in its mechanical properties than the posterior leaflet. This study measures differences between the two mitral leaflets with greater resolution than previously feasible and demonstrates a method that may be suitable for assessing valve mechanics following repair or during the engineering of synthetic valve replacements.  相似文献   

19.
Aortic valve (AV) calcification is a highly prevalent disease with serious impact on mortality and morbidity. Although exact causes and mechanisms of AV calcification are unclear, previous studies suggest that mechanical forces play a role. Since calcium deposits occur almost exclusively on the aortic surfaces of AV leaflets, it has been hypothesized that adverse patterns of fluid shear stress on the aortic surface of AV leaflets promote calcification. The current study characterizes AV leaflet aortic surface fluid shear stresses using Laser Doppler velocimetry and an in vitro pulsatile flow loop. The valve model used was a native porcine valve mounted on a suturing ring and preserved using 0.15% glutaraldehyde solution. This valve model was inserted in a mounting chamber with sinus geometries, which is made of clear acrylic to provide optical access for measurements. To understand the effects of hemodynamics on fluid shear stress, shear stress was measured across a range of conditions: varying stroke volumes at the same heart rate and varying heart rates at the same stroke volume. Systolic shear stress magnitude was found to be much higher than diastolic shear stress magnitude due to the stronger flow in the sinuses during systole, reaching up to 20 dyn/cm2 at mid-systole. Upon increasing stroke volume, fluid shear stresses increased due to stronger sinus fluid motion. Upon increasing heart rate, fluid shear stresses decreased due to reduced systolic duration that restricted the formation of strong sinus flow. Significant changes in the shear stress waveform were observed at 90 beats/min, most likely due to altered leaflet dynamics at this higher heart rate. Overall, this study represents the most well-resolved shear stress measurements to date across a range of conditions on the aortic side of the AV. The data presented can be used for further investigation to understand AV biological response to shear stresses.  相似文献   

20.
Aortic valve (AV) calcification is a highly prevalent disease with serious impact on mortality and morbidity. The exact cause and mechanism of the progression of AV calcification is unknown, although mechanical forces have been known to play a role. It is thus important to characterize the mechanical environment of the AV. In the current study, we establish a methodology of measuring shear stresses experienced by the aortic surface of the AV leaflets using an in vitro valve model and adapting the laser Doppler velocimetry (LDV) technique. The valve model was constructed from a fresh porcine aortic valve, which was trimmed and sutured onto a plastic stented ring, and inserted into an idealized three-lobed sinus acrylic chamber. Valve leaflet location was measured by obtaining the location of highest back-scattered LDV laser light intensity. The technique of performing LDV measurements near to biological surfaces as well as the leaflet locating technique was first validated in two phantom flow systems: (1) steady flow within a straight tube with AV leaflet adhered to the wall, and (2) steady flow within the actual valve model. Dynamic shear stresses were then obtained by applying the techniques on the valve model in a physiologic pulsatile flow loop. Results show that aortic surface shear stresses are low during early systole (<5 dyn/cm2) but elevated to its peak during mid to late systole at about 18-20 dyn/cm2. Low magnitude shear stress (<5 dyn/cm2) was observed during early diastole and dissipated to zero over the diastolic duration. Systolic shear stress was observed to elevate only with the formation of sinus vortex flow. The presented technique can also be used on other in vitro valve models such as congenitally geometrically malformed valves, or to investigate effects of hemodynamics on valve shear stress. Shear stress data can be used for further experiments investigating effects of fluid shear stress on valve biology, for conditioning tissue engineered AV, and to validate numerical simulations.  相似文献   

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