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1.
Numerical models are increasingly used in the cardiovascular field to reproduce, study and improve devices and clinical treatments. The recent literature involves a number of patient-specific models replicating the transcatheter aortic valve implantation procedure, a minimally invasive treatment for high-risk patients with aortic diseases. The representation of the actual patient’s condition with truthful anatomy, materials and working conditions is the first step toward the simulation of the clinical procedure.The aim of this work is to quantify how the quality of routine clinical data, from which the patient-specific models are built, affects the outputs of the numerical models representing the pathological condition of stenotic aortic valve.Seven fluid–structure interaction (FSI) simulations were performed, completed with a sensitivity analysis on patient-specific reconstructed geometries and boundary conditions. The structural parts of the models consisted of the aortic root, native tri-leaflets valve and calcifications. Ventricular and aortic pressure curves were applied to the fluid domain.The differences between clinical data and numerical results for the aortic valve area were less than 2% but reached 12% when boundary conditions and geometries were changed. The difference in the aortic stenosis jet velocity between measured and simulated values was less than 11% reaching 27% when the geometry was changed. The CT slice thickness was found to be the most sensitive parameter on the presented FSI numerical model.In conclusion, the results showed that the segmentation and reconstruction phases need to be carefully performed to obtain a truthful patient-specific domain to be used in FSI analyses.  相似文献   

2.
Transcatheter Aortic Valves rely on the tissue-stent interaction to ensure that the valve is secured within the aortic root. Aortic stenosis presents with heavily calcified leaflets and it has been proposed that this calcification also acts to secure the valve, but this has never been quantified. In this study, we developed an in vitro calcified aortic root model to quantify the role of calcification on the tissue-stent interaction. The in vitro model incorporated artificial calcifications affixed to the leaflets of porcine aortic heart valves. A self-expanding nitinol braided stent was deployed into non-calcified and artificially calcified porcine aortic roots and imaged by micro computed tomography. Mechanical tests were then conducted to dislodge the stent from the aortic root and it was found that, in the presence of calcification, there was a significant increase in pullout force (8.59 ± 3.68 N vs. 2.84 ± 1.55 N p = 0.045), stent eccentricity (0.05 ± 0.01 vs. 0.02 ± 0.01, p = 0.049), and coefficient of friction between the stent and aortic root (0.36 ± 0.12 vs. 0.09 ± 0.05, p = 0.018), when compared to non-calcified roots. This study quantifies for the first time the impact of calcification on the friction between the aortic tissue and transcatheter aortic valve stent, showing the role of calcification in anchoring the valve stent in the aortic root.  相似文献   

3.
Leaflet thrombosis following transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) and Valve-in-Valve (ViV) procedures has been increasingly recognized. This study aimed to investigate the effect of positioning of the transcatheter aortic valve (TAV) in ViV setting on the flow dynamics aspect of post-ViV thrombosis by quantifying the blood stasis in the intra-annular and supra-annular settings. To that end, two idealized computational models, representing ViV intra-annular and supra-annular positioning of a TAV were developed in a patient-specific geometry. Three-dimensional flow fields were then obtained via fluid-solid interaction modeling to study the difference in blood residence time (BRT) on the TAV leaflets in the two settings. At the end of diastole, a strip of high BRT (1.2s) region was observed on the TAV leaflets in the ViV intra-annular positioning at the fixed boundary where the leaflets are attached to the frame. Such a high BRT region was absent on the TAV leaflets in the supra-annular positioning. The maximum value of BRT on the surface of non-, right, and left coronary leaflets of the TAV in the supra-annular positioning were 53%, 11%, and 27% smaller compared to the intra-annular positioning, respectively. It was concluded that the geometric confinement of TAV by the leaflets of the failed bioprosthetic valve in ViV intra-annular positioning increases the BRT on the leaflets and may act as a permissive factor in valvular thrombosis. The absence of such a geometric confinement in the ViV supra-annular positioning leads to smaller BRT and subsequently less likelihood of leaflet thrombosis.  相似文献   

4.
The asymmetric, elliptical shape of a transcatheter aortic valve (TAV), after implantation into a calcified aortic root, has been clinically observed. However, the impact of elliptical TAV configuration on TAV leaflet stress and strain distribution and valve regurgitation is largely unknown. In this study, we developed computational models of elliptical TAVs based on a thin pericardial bioprosthetic valve model recently developed. Finite element and computational fluid dynamics simulations were performed to investigate TAV leaflet structural deformation and central backflow leakage, and compared with those of a nominal symmetric TAV. From the results, we found that for a distorted TAV with an elliptical eccentricity of 0.68, the peak stress increased significantly by 143% compared with the nominal circular TAV. When the eccentricity of an elliptical TAV was larger than 0.5, a central backflow leakage was likely to occur. Also, deployment of a TAV with a major calcified region perpendicular to leaflet coaptation line was likely to cause a larger valve leakage. In conclusion, the computational models of elliptical TAVs developed in this study could improve our understanding of the biomechanics involved in a TAV with an elliptical configuration and facilitate optimal design of next-generation TAV devices.  相似文献   

5.
The bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) is associated with a high prevalence of calcific aortic valve disease (CAVD). Although abnormal hemodynamics has been proposed as a potential pathogenic contributor, the native BAV hemodynamic stresses remain largely unknown. Fluid-structure interaction models were designed to quantify the regional BAV leaflet wall-shear stress over the course of CAVD. Systolic flow and leaflet dynamics were computed in two-dimensional tricuspid aortic valve (TAV) and type-1 BAV geometries with different degree of asymmetry (10 and 16% eccentricity) using an arbitrary Lagrangian–Eulerian approach. Valvular performance and regional leaflet wallshear stress were quantified in terms of valve effective orifice area (EOA), oscillatory shear index (OSI) and temporal shear magnitude (TSM). The dependence of those characteristics on the degree of leaflet calcification was also investigated. The models predicted an average reduction of 49% in BAV peak-systolic EOA relative to the TAV. Regardless of the anatomy, the leaflet wall-shear stress was side-specific and characterized by high magnitude and pulsatility on the ventricularis and low magnitude and oscillations on the fibrosa. While the TAV and non-coronary BAV leaflets shared similar shear stress characteristics, the base of the fused BAV leaflet fibrosa exhibited strong abnormalities, which were modulated by the degree of calcification (6-fold, 10-fold and 16-fold TSM increase in the normal, mildly and severely calcified BAV, respectively, relative to the normal TAV). This study reveals the existence of major differences in wall-shear stress pulsatility and magnitude on TAV and BAV leaflets. Given the ability of abnormal fluid shear stress to trigger valvular inflammation, the results support the existence of a mechano-etiology of CAVD in the BAV.  相似文献   

6.
Computational simulation of transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) device deployment presents a significant challenge over and above similar simulations for percutaneous coronary intervention due to the presence of prosthetic leaflets. In light of the complexity of these leaflets, simulations have been performed to assess the effect of including the leaflets in a complete model of a balloon-expandable TAVI device when deployed in a patient-specific aortic root. Using an average model discrepancy metric, the average frame positions (with and without the leaflets) are shown to vary by 0.236% of the expanded frame diameter (26 mm). This relatively small discrepancy leads to the conclusion that for a broad range of replacement valve studies, including new frame configurations and designs, patient-specific assessment of apposition, paravalvular leakage and tissue stress, modelling of the prosthetic leaflets is likely to have a marginal effect on the results  相似文献   

7.
Bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) is associated with aortic dilatation and aneurysm. Several studies evidenced an eccentric systolic flow in ascending aorta associated with increased wall shear stresses (WSS) and the occurrence of an helical systolic flow. This study seeks to elucidate the connections between jet asymmetry and helical flow in patients with normally functioning BAV and dilated ascending aorta. We performed a computational parametric study by varying, for a patient-specific geometry, the valve area and the flow rate entering the aorta and drawing also a tricuspid valve (TAV). We considered also phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging of four BAV and TAV patients. Measurement of normalized flow asymmetry index, systolic WSS and of a new index (positive helix fraction, PHF) quantifying the presence of a single a single helical flow were performed. In our computation, BAV cases featured higher values of all indices with respect to TAV in both numerical and imaged-based results. Moreover, all indices increased with decreasing valve area and/or with increasing flow rate. This allowed to separate the BAV and TAV cases with respect to the jet asymmetry, WSS localization and helical flow. Interestingly, these results were obtained without modeling the leaflets.  相似文献   

8.
Patient-specific computational models are an established tool to support device development and test under clinically relevant boundary conditions. Potentially, such models could be used to aid the clinical decision-making process for percutaneous valve selection; however, their adoption in clinical practice is still limited to individual cases. To be fully informative, they should include patient-specific data on both anatomy and mechanics of the implantation site. In this work, fourteen patient-specific computational models for transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) with balloon-expandable Sapien XT devices were retrospectively developed to tune the material parameters of the implantation site mechanical model for the average TAVR population.Pre-procedural computed tomography (CT) images were post-processed to create the 3D patient-specific anatomy of the implantation site. Balloon valvuloplasty and device deployment were simulated with finite element (FE) analysis. Valve leaflets and aortic root were modelled as linear elastic materials, while calcification as elastoplastic. Material properties were initially selected from literature; then, a statistical analysis was designed to investigate the effect of each implantation site material parameter on the implanted stent diameter and thus identify the combination of material parameters for TAVR patients.These numerical models were validated against clinical data. The comparison between stent diameters measured from post-procedural fluoroscopy images and final computational results showed a mean difference of 2.5 ± 3.9%. Moreover, the numerical model detected the presence of paravalvular leakage (PVL) in 79% of cases, as assessed by post-TAVR echocardiographic examination.The final aim was to increase accuracy and reliability of such computational tools for prospective clinical applications.  相似文献   

9.
Until recently, heart valve failure has been treated adopting open-heart surgical techniques and cardiopulmonary bypass. However, over the last decade, minimally invasive procedures have been developed to avoid high risks associated with conventional open-chest valve replacement techniques. Such a recent and innovative procedure represents an optimal field for conducting investigations through virtual computer-based simulations: in fact, nowadays, computational engineering is widely used to unravel many problems in the biomedical field of cardiovascular mechanics and specifically, minimally invasive procedures. In this study, we investigate a balloon-expandable valve and we propose a novel simulation strategy to reproduce its implantation using computational tools. Focusing on the Edwards SAPIEN valve in particular, we simulate both stent crimping and deployment through balloon inflation. The developed procedure enabled us to obtain the entire prosthetic device virtually implanted in a patient-specific aortic root created by processing medical images; hence, it allows evaluation of postoperative prosthesis performance depending on different factors (e.g. device size and prosthesis placement site). Notably, prosthesis positioning in two different cases (distal and proximal) has been examined in terms of coaptation area, average stress on valve leaflets as well as impact on the aortic root wall. The coaptation area is significantly affected by the positioning strategy ( ? 24%, moving from the proximal to distal) as well as the stress distribution on both the leaflets (+13.5%, from proximal to distal) and the aortic wall ( ? 22%, from proximal to distal). No remarkable variations of the stress state on the stent struts have been obtained in the two investigated cases.  相似文献   

10.
TAVI devices are manufactured with cylindrical frames. However, the frames are rarely cylindrical post-deployment since deformation due to localised under expansion can be induced by calcified material on the native valve leaflets exerting irregular forces upon the frame. Consequently, the leaflets within a deformed TAVI device may undergo elevated stress during operation, which may lead to premature device failure.Using computational analysis a complete TAVI device model was simulated undergoing deployment into an aortic root model derived from CT data for a patient with severe calcific aortic stenosis, followed by a pressure simulated cardiac cycle. The complete analysis was performed eight times, each with the device at a different rotational orientation relative to the native valve, with an increment spacing of 15°.The TAVI device frames consistently featured significant distortions associated with bulky calcified material at the base of the non-coronary sinus. It was found that the average von Mises stress in the prosthetic valves was only increased in one of the cases relative to an idealised device. However, the maximum von Mises stress in the prosthetic valves was elevated in the majority of the cases.Furthermore, it was found that there were preferable orientations to deploy the prosthetic device, in this case, when the prosthetic leaflets were aligned with the native leaflets. As device orientation deviated from this orientation, the stresses in the valve increased because the distance between the prosthetic commissures decreased. This potentially could represent a sufficient increase in stress to induce variation in device lifespan.  相似文献   

11.
Here, we demonstrate the angiogenic response of valvular endothelial cells to aortic valve (AV) stenosis using a new ex vivo model of aortic leaflets. Histological analysis revealed neovascularization within the cusps of stenotic but not of non-stenotic aortic valves. Correspondingly, the number of capillary-like outgrowth in 3D collagen gel was significantly higher in stenotic than in non-stenotic valves. Capillary-like sprouting was developed significantly faster in stenotic than in non-stenotic valves. New capillary sprouts from stenotic aortic valves exhibited the endothelial cell markers CD31, CD34 and von-Willebrand factor (vWF) as well as carcinoembryonic antigen cell adhesion molecule-1 (CEACAM1), Tie-2 and angiogenesis inhibitor endostatin. Western blot analyses revealed a significant increase of CEACAM1 and endostatin in stenotic aortic valve tissue. Electron microscopic examinations demonstrate that these capillary-like tubes are formed by endothelial cells containing Weibel-Palade bodies. Remarkably, inter-endothelial junctions are established and basement membrane material is partially deposited on the basal side of the endothelial tubes. Our data demonstrate the capillary-like sprout formation from aortic valves and suggest a role of angiogenesis in the pathogenesis of aortic valve stenosis. These data provide new insights into the mechanisms of valvular disorders and open new perspectives for prevention and early treatment of calcified aortic stenosis.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
In abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) simulation the patient-specific geometry of the object of interest is very often reconstructed from in vivo medical imaging such as CT scans. Such geometries represent a deformed configuration stressed by typical in vivo conditions. However, commonly, such structures are considered stress-free in simulation. In this contribution we sketch and compare two methods to introduce a physically meaningful stress/strain state to the obtained geometry for simulations in the finite strain regime and demonstrate the necessity of such prestressing techniques. One method is based on an inverse design analysis to calculate a stress-free reference configuration. The other method developed here is based on a modified updated Lagrangian formulation. Formulation of both methods is provided. Applicability and accurateness of both approaches are compared and evaluated utilizing fully three-dimensional patient-specific AAA structures in the finite strain regime.  相似文献   

14.
For the design of aortic valve prostheses with a separation-free flow field and minimum pressure drop the geometry of the aortic root is of high importance, since an appropriate adjustment of the prostheses to the surrounding geometry could largely reduce the risk of thromboembolic complications. For the investigation of the geometry of the aortic root 604 angiographic films out of a total stock of 15,000 of the Medical Clinic I were evaluated. The film material was preclassified into five clinical categories according to the patient's data. For each category characteristic geometries could be derived in non-dimensional form.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) is a minimally invasive procedure introduced to treat aortic valve stenosis in elder patients. Its clinical outcomes are strictly related to patient selection, operator skills, and dedicated pre-procedural planning based on accurate medical imaging analysis. The goal of this work is to define a finite element framework to realistically reproduce TAVI and evaluate the impact of aortic root anatomy on procedure outcomes starting from two real patient datasets. Patient-specific aortic root models including native leaflets, calcific plaques extracted from medical images, and an accurate stent geometry based on micro-tomography reconstruction are key aspects included in the present study. Through the proposed simulation strategy we observe that, in both patients, stent apposition significantly induces anatomical configuration changes, while it leads to different stress distributions on the aortic wall. Moreover, for one patient, a possible risk of paravalvular leakage has been found while an asymmetric coaptation occurs in both investigated cases. Post-operative clinical data, that have been analyzed to prove reliability of the performed simulations, show a good agreement with analysis results. The proposed work thus represents a further step towards the use of realistic computer-based simulations of TAVI procedures, aiming at improving the efficacy of the operation technique and supporting device optimization.  相似文献   

17.
The bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) is the most common congenital cardiac anomaly and is frequently associated with calcific aortic valve disease (CAVD). The most prevalent type-I morphology, which results from left-/right-coronary cusp fusion, generates different hemodynamics than a tricuspid aortic valve (TAV). While valvular calcification has been linked to genetic and atherogenic predispositions, hemodynamic abnormalities are increasingly pointed as potential pathogenic contributors. In particular, the wall shear stress (WSS) produced by blood flow on the leaflets regulates homeostasis in the TAV. In contrast, WSS alterations cause valve dysfunction and disease. While such observations support the existence of synergies between valvular hemodynamics and biology, the role played by BAV WSS in valvular calcification remains unknown. The objective of this study was to isolate the acute effects of native BAV WSS abnormalities on CAVD pathogenesis. Porcine aortic valve leaflets were subjected ex vivo to the native WSS experienced by TAV and type-I BAV leaflets for 48 hours. Immunostaining, immunoblotting and zymography were performed to characterize endothelial activation, pro-inflammatory paracrine signaling, extracellular matrix remodeling and markers involved in valvular interstitial cell activation and osteogenesis. While TAV and non-coronary BAV leaflet WSS essentially maintained valvular homeostasis, fused BAV leaflet WSS promoted fibrosa endothelial activation, paracrine signaling (2.4-fold and 3.7-fold increase in BMP-4 and TGF-β1, respectively, relative to fresh controls), catabolic enzyme secretion (6.3-fold, 16.8-fold, 11.7-fold, 16.7-fold and 5.5-fold increase in MMP-2, MMP-9, cathepsin L, cathepsin S and TIMP-2, respectively) and activity (1.7-fold and 2.4-fold increase in MMP-2 and MMP-9 activity, respectively), and bone matrix synthesis (5-fold increase in osteocalcin). In contrast, BAV WSS did not significantly affect α-SMA and Runx2 expressions and TIMP/MMP ratio. This study demonstrates the key role played by BAV hemodynamic abnormalities in CAVD pathogenesis and suggests the dependence of BAV vulnerability to calcification on the local degree of WSS abnormality.  相似文献   

18.
Percutaneous aortic valve implantation has become an alternative technique to surgical valve replacement in patients with high risk for open chest surgery. Vascular stents clinically used today for non-invasive aortic valve replacement tend, however, to impede the dimension changes of the compliant aortic root over the cardiac cycle. The purpose of the present work is to assess the influence of a novel heart valve stent, designed specifically to limit the traumatism in tissue, on the compliance of the aortic root. A theoretical approach is adopted to model the mechanical behaviour of the different stent parts and assess the compliance modification induced by the stent. The validity of the model is then tested experimentally. Both approaches show that the specific geometry of the stent makes it possible to keep the compliance of the aortic root close to the native root values.  相似文献   

19.
Turbulent flow simulations are run for five aortic trileaflet valve geometries, ranging from a valve leaflet orifice area of 1.1 cm2 (Model A1—very stenotic) to 5.0 cm2 (Model A5—natural valve). The simulated data compares well with experimental measurements made downstream of various aortic trileaflet valves by Woo (PhD Thesis, 1984). The location and approximate width and length of recirculation regions are correctly predicted. The less stenotic valve models reattach at the end of the aortic sinus region, 1.1 diameters downstream of the valve. The central jet exiting the less stenotic valve models is not significantly different from fully developed flow, and therefore recovers very quickly downstream of the reattachment point. The more stenotic valves disturb the flow to a greater degree, generating recirculation regions large enough to escape the sinuses and reattach further downstream. Peak turbulent shear stress values downstream of the aortic valve models which approximated prosthetic valves are 125 and 300 N m−2, very near experimental observations of 150 to 350 N m−2. The predicted Reynolds stress profiles also present the correct shape, a double peak profile, with the location of the peak occuring at the location of maximum velocity gradient, which occurs near the recirculation region. The pressure drop across model A2 (leaflet orifice area 1.6 cm2) is 20 mmHg at 1.6 diameters downstream. This compares well with values ranging from 19.5 to 26.2 mmHg for valves of similar orifice areas. The pressure drop decreases with decreasing valve stenosis, to a negligible value across the least stenotic valve model. Based on the good agreement between experimental measurements of velocity, shear stress and pressure drop, compared to the simulated data, the model has the potential to be a valuable tool in the analysis of heart valve designs.  相似文献   

20.
Right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) calcific obstruction is frequent after homograft conduit implantation to treat congenital heart disease. Stenting and percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation (PPVI) can relieve the obstruction and prolong the conduit lifespan, but require accurate pre-procedural evaluation to minimize the risk of coronary artery (CA) compression, stent fracture, conduit injury or arterial distortion.Herein, we test patient-specific finite element (FE) modeling as a tool to assess stenting feasibility and investigate clinically relevant risks associated to the percutaneous intervention.Three patients undergoing attempted PPVI due to calcific RVOT conduit failure were enrolled; the calcific RVOT, the aortic root and the proximal CA were segmented on CT scans for each patient. We numerically reproduced RVOT balloon angioplasty to test procedure feasibility and the subsequent RVOT pre-stenting expanding the stent through a balloon-in-balloon delivery system.Our FE framework predicted the occurrence of CA compression in the patient excluded from the real procedure. In the two patients undergoing RVOT stenting, numerical results were consistent with intraprocedural in-vivo fluoroscopic evidences. Furthermore, it quantified the stresses on the stent and on the relevant native structures, highlighting their marked dependence on the extent, shape and location of the calcific deposits. Stent deployment induced displacement and mechanical loading of the calcific deposits, also impacting on the adjacent anatomical structures.This novel workflow has the potential to tackle the analysis of complex RVOT clinical scenarios, pinpointing the procedure impact on the dysfunctional anatomy and elucidating potential periprocedural complications.  相似文献   

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