Computational haemodynamics for pulmonary valve replacement by means of a reduced fluid‐structure interaction model

Author:

Criseo Elisabetta12,Fumagalli Ivan3ORCID,Quarteroni Alfio34ORCID,Marianeschi Stefano Maria5,Vergara Christian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. LaBS, Dipartimento di Chimica, Materiali e Ingegneria Chimica Politecnico di Milano Milan Italy

2. Centro Cardiologico Monzino IRCCS Milan Italy

3. MOX, Dipartimento di Matematica Politecnico di Milano Milan Italy

4. Institute of Mathematics, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

5. Cardiac Surgery ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda Milan Italy

Abstract

AbstractPulmonary valve replacement (PVR) consists of substituting a patient's original valve with a prosthetic one, primarily addressing pulmonary valve insufficiency, which is crucially relevant in Tetralogy of Fallot repairment. While extensive clinical and computational literature on aortic and mitral valve replacements is available, PVR's post‐procedural haemodynamics in the pulmonary artery and the impact of prosthetic valve dynamics remain significantly understudied. Addressing this gap, we introduce a reduced Fluid–Structure Interaction (rFSI) model, applied for the first time to the pulmonary valve. This model couples a three‐dimensional computational representation of pulmonary artery haemodynamics with a one‐degree‐of‐freedom model to account for valve structural mechanics. Through this approach, we analyse patient‐specific haemodynamics pre and post PVR. Patient‐specific geometries, reconstructed from CT scans, are virtually equipped with a template valve geometry. Boundary conditions for the model are established using a lumped‐parameter model, fine‐tuned based on clinical patient data. Our model accurately reproduces patient‐specific haemodynamic changes across different scenarios: pre‐PVR, six months post‐PVR, and a follow‐up condition after a decade. It effectively demonstrates the impact of valve implantation on sustaining the diastolic pressure gradient across the valve. The numerical results indicate that our valve model is able to reproduce overall physiological and/or pathological conditions, as preliminary assessed on two different patients. This promising approach provides insights into post‐PVR haemodynamics and prosthetic valve effects, shedding light on potential implications for patient‐specific outcomes.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Ministero della Salute

Publisher

Wiley

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