Intraventricular flow alterations due to dyssynchronous wall motion

POSTER

Abstract

Roughly 30{\%} of patients with systolic heart failure suffer from left ventricular dyssynchrony (LVD), in which mechanical discoordination of the ventricle walls leads to poor hemodynamics and suboptimal cardiac function. There is currently no clear mechanistic understanding of how abnormalities in septal-lateral (SL) wall motion affects left ventricle (LV) function, which is needed to improve the treatment of LVD using cardiac resynchronization therapy. We use an experimental flow phantom with an LV physical model to study mechanistic effects of SL wall motion delay on LV function. To simulate mechanical LVD, two rigid shafts were coupled to two segments (apical and mid sections) along the septal wall of the LV model. Flow through the LV model was driven using a piston pump, and stepper motors coupled to the above shafts were used to locally perturb the septal wall segments relative to the pump motion. 2D PIV was used to examine the intraventricular flow through the LV physical model. Alterations to SL delay results in a reduction in the kinetic energy (KE) of the flow field compared to synchronous SL motion. The effect of varying SL motion delay from 0{\%} (synchronous) to 100{\%} (out-of-phase) on KE and viscous dissipation will be presented.

Authors

  • Audrey M. Pope

    Stillwater High School

  • Hong Kuan Lai

    Oklahoma State University

  • Milad Samaee

    Oklahoma State University

  • Arvind Santhanakrishnan

    Oklahoma State University