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The dependency of fetal left ventricular biomechanics function on myocardium helix angle configuration
Authors:Green  Laura  Chan  Wei Xuan  Ren  Meifeng  Mattar  Citra Nurfarah Zaini  Lee  Lik Chuan  Yap  Choon Hwai
Institution:1.Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK
;2.BHF Centre of Research Excellence, Imperial College London, London, UK
;3.Department of Biomedical Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
;4.Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, National University Health Systems, Singapore, Singapore
;5.Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
;6.Department of Mechanical Engineering, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA
;
Abstract:

The helix angle configuration of the myocardium is understood to contribute to the heart function, as finite element (FE) modeling of postnatal hearts showed that altered configurations affected cardiac function and biomechanics. However, similar investigations have not been done on the fetal heart. To address this, we performed image-based FE simulations of fetal left ventricles (LV) over a range of helix angle configurations, assuming a linear variation of helix angles from epicardium to endocardium. Results showed that helix angles have substantial influence on peak myofiber stress, cardiac stroke work, myocardial deformational burden, and spatial variability of myocardial strain. A good match between LV myocardial strains from FE simulations to those measured from 4D fetal echo images could only be obtained if the transmural variation of helix angle was generally between 110 and 130°, suggesting that this was the physiological range. Experimentally discovered helix angle configurations from the literature were found to produce high peak myofiber stress, high cardiac stroke work, and a low myocardial deformational burden, but did not coincide with configurations that would optimize these characteristics. This may suggest that the fetal development of myocyte orientations depends concurrently on several factors rather than a single factor. We further found that the shape, rather than the size of the LV, determined the manner at which helix angles influenced these characteristics, as this influence changed significantly when the LV shape was varied, but not when a heart was scaled from fetal to adult size while retaining the same shape. This may suggest that biomechanical optimality would be affected during diseases that altered the geometric shape of the LV.

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