On the Impact of Left Upper Lobectomy on the Left Atrial Hemodynamics

Author:

Otani Tomohiro,Yoshida Takuya,Yi Wentao,Endo Shunsuke,Wada Shigeo

Abstract

The left atrium (LA) functions to transport oxygenated blood from the pulmonary veins (PVs) to the left ventricle (LV). LA hemodynamics has received much attention because thrombosis in the LA in pathological states, such as atrial fibrillation, is a major factor leading to thromboembolic stroke. In the last 5 years, multiple cohort studies have revealed that left upper lobectomy (LUL) with PV resection risks thrombus formation in the PV stump even in the normal LA without a history of cardiac disease; the causal mechanism is, however, an open question. The present study investigated the potential effect of an LUL on LA hemodynamics associated with thrombus formation through computational simulation using four-dimensional computed tomography (4D-CT) images. Time series of patient-specific LA geometries before and after LUL were extracted from the 4D-CT images and these motions were estimated through non-rigid registration. Adopting the LA geometries and prescribed moving wall boundary conditions, the LA blood flow was determined using a Cartesian-grid computational fluid dynamics solver. The obtained results show that the LUL resulted in blood flow impingement from the left and right PV inflows into the LA upper region throughout most of the cardiac cycle. This characteristic alteration of the LA hemodynamics generated fine-scale vortices with viscous energy dissipations, enhancing the flow stasis associated with thrombus formation in the PV stump. These findings show that an LUL affects the hemodynamics not only in the PV stump but also throughout the LA region. They also highlight the importance of computational analysis of LA hemodynamics in understanding the underlying mechanism of LUL-induced thrombus formation.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Osaka University

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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