Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering (Sep 2018)
Aortic regurgitation after transcatheter aortic valve replacement
Abstract
The assessment of hydrodynamic performance of transcatheter aortic valve prostheses in vitro is essential for the develosepment and approval of novel devices. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the correlation of target implantation depth and paravalvular regurgitation in a controlled in vitro test situation. We designed a test setup with retrograde steady flow conditions measuring paravalvular regurgitation as a function of increasing pressure on the closed valve ranging from 0 mmHg to 200 mmHg. Our future aim is to benchmark different valve prosthesis designs and describe the correlation between target implantation depth, paravalvular regurgitation and prosthesis design aspects. The current study describes the developed test setup, validation experiments as well as first results for a selfexpanding valve prosthesis. The highest regurgitation was measured at an implantation depth of 2 mm. In fact, regurgitation increases from 26.1 ± 8.2 ml/min at 0 mmHg to 1,490.7 ± 182.7 ml/min at 160 mmHg. The slightest regurgitation, however, was measured for an implantation depth of 6 mm ranging from 2.2 ± 0.6 ml/min at 0 mmHg to 605.8 ± 18.9 ml/min at 200 mmHg.
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