Affiliation: | aBiomedical Engineering Laboratory, Clinical Research Institute of Montreal, IRCM, 110 Pine West Avenue, Montreal, QC, Canada H2W 1R7 bPhilips Research USA, Healthcare Systems and Information Technology, Briarcliff Manor, NY, USA cResearch Center of Laval Hospital-Quebec Heart Institute, Laval University, Sainte-Foy, QC, Canada |
Abstract: | In presence of aortic stenosis, a jet is produced downstream of the aortic valve annulus during systole. The vena contracta corresponds to the location where the cross-sectional area of the flow jet is minimal. The maximal transvalvular pressure gradient (TPGmax) is the difference between the static pressure in the left ventricle and that in the vena contracta. TPGmax is highly time-dependent over systole and is known to depend upon the transvalvular flow rate, the effective orifice area (EOA) of the aortic valve and the cross-sectional area of the left ventricular outflow tract. However, it is still unclear how these parameters modify the TPGmax waveform. We thus derived an explicit analytical model to describe the instantaneous TPGmax across the aortic valve during systole. This theoretical model was validated with in vivo experiments obtained in 19 pigs with supravalvular aortic stenosis. Instantaneous TPGmax was measured by catheter and its waveform was compared with the one determined from the derived equation. Our results showed a very good concordance between the measured and predicted instantaneous TPGmax. Total relative error and mean absolute error were on average 9.4±4.9% and 2.1±1.1 mmHg, respectively. The analytical model proposed and validated in this study provides new insight into the behaviour of the TPGmax and thus of the aortic pressure at the level of vena contracta. Because the static pressure at the coronary inlet is similar to that at the vena contracta, the proposed equation will permit to further examine the impact of aortic stenosis on coronary blood flow. |