scholarly journals A Quantitative Comparison of Mechanical Blood Damage Parameters in Rotary Ventricular Assist Devices: Shear Stress, Exposure Time and Hemolysis Index

2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Katharine H. Fraser ◽  
Tao Zhang ◽  
M. Ertan Taskin ◽  
Bartley P. Griffith ◽  
Zhongjun J. Wu

Ventricular assist devices (VADs) have already helped many patients with heart failure but have the potential to assist more patients if current problems with blood damage (hemolysis, platelet activation, thrombosis and emboli, and destruction of the von Willebrand factor (vWf)) can be eliminated. A step towards this goal is better understanding of the relationships between shear stress, exposure time, and blood damage and, from there, the development of numerical models for the different types of blood damage to enable the design of improved VADs. In this study, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was used to calculate the hemodynamics in three clinical VADs and two investigational VADs and the shear stress, residence time, and hemolysis were investigated. A new scalar transport model for hemolysis was developed. The results were compared with in vitro measurements of the pressure head in each VAD and the hemolysis index in two VADs. A comparative analysis of the blood damage related fluid dynamic parameters and hemolysis index was performed among the VADs. Compared to the centrifugal VADs, the axial VADs had: higher mean scalar shear stress (sss); a wider range of sss, with larger maxima and larger percentage volumes at both low and high sss; and longer residence times at very high sss. The hemolysis predictions were in agreement with the experiments and showed that the axial VADs had a higher hemolysis index. The increased hemolysis in axial VADs compared to centrifugal VADs is a direct result of their higher shear stresses and longer residence times. Since platelet activation and destruction of the vWf also require high shear stresses, the flow conditions inside axial VADs are likely to result in more of these types of blood damage compared with centrifugal VADs.

2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (12) ◽  
pp. 725-734 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Loosli ◽  
Stephan Rupp ◽  
Bente Thamsen ◽  
Mathias Rebholz ◽  
Gerald Kress ◽  
...  

Pulsatile positive displacement pumps as ventricular assist devices were gradually replaced by rotary devices due to their large volume and high adverse event rates. Nevertheless, pulsatile ventricular assist devices might be beneficial with regard to gastrointestinal bleeding and cardiac recovery. Therefore, aim of this study was to investigate the flow field in new pulsatile ventricular assist devices concepts with an increased pump frequency, which would allow lower stroke volumes to reduce the pump size. We developed a novel elliptically shaped pulsatile ventricular assist devices, which we compared to a design based on a circular shape. The pump size was adjusted to deliver similar flow rates at pump frequencies of 80, 160, and 240 bpm. Through a computational fluid dynamics study, we investigated flow patterns, residence times, and wall shear stresses for different frequencies and pump sizes. A pump size reduction by almost 50% is possible when using a threefold pump frequency. We show that flow patterns inside the circular pump are frequency dependent, while they remain similar for the elliptic pump. With slightly increased wall shear stresses for higher frequencies, maximum wall shear stresses on the pump housing are higher for the circular design (42.2 Pa vs 18.4 Pa). The calculated blood residence times within the pump decrease significantly with increasing pump rates. A smaller pump size leads to a slight increase of wall shear stresses and a significant improvement of residence times. Hence, high-frequency operation of pulsatile ventricular assist devices, especially in combination with an elliptical shape, might be a feasible mean to reduce the size, without any expectable disadvantages in terms of hemocompatibility.


2016 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
pp. 110-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorenzo Valerio ◽  
Phat L. Tran ◽  
Jawaad Sheriff ◽  
William Brengle ◽  
Ram Ghosh ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Yasuyuki Shiraishi ◽  
Yuma Tachizaki ◽  
Yusuke Inoue ◽  
Masaki Hayakawa ◽  
Akihiro Yamada ◽  
...  

AbstractChronic blood trauma caused by the shear stresses generated by mechanical circulatory support (MCS) systems is one of the major concerns to be considered during the development of ventricular assist devices. Large multimers with high-molecular-weight von Willebrand factor (VWF) are extended by the fluid forces in a shear flow and are cleaved by ADAMTS13. Since the mechanical revolving motions in artificial MCSs induce cleavage in large VWF multimers, nonsurgical bleeding associated with the MCS is likely to occur after mechanical hemodynamic support. In this study, the shear stress (~ 600 Pa) and exposure time related to hemolysis and VWF degradation were investigated using a newly designed mechanical shuttle shear flow tester. The device consisted of a pair of cylinders facing the test section of a small-sized pipe; both the cylinders were connected to composite mechanical heads with a sliding-sleeve structure for axial separation during the withdrawing motion. The influence of exposure time, in terms of the number of stress cycles, on hemolysis and VWF degradation was confirmed using fresh goat blood, and the differences in the rates of dissipation of the multimers were established. The plasma-free hemoglobin levels showed a logarithmic increase corresponding to the number of cycles, and the dissipation of large VWF multimers occurred within a few seconds under high shear stress flow conditions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 (11) ◽  
pp. 738-751 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominica PY Khoo ◽  
Andrew N Cookson ◽  
Harinderjit S Gill ◽  
Katharine H Fraser

Despite the evolution of ventricular assist devices, ventricular assist device patients still suffer from complications due to the damage to blood by fluid dynamic stress. Since rotary ventricular assist devices are assumed to exert mainly shear stress, studies of blood damage are based on shear flow experiments. However, measurements and simulations of cell and protein deformation show normal and shear stresses deform, and potentially damage, cells and proteins differently. The aim was to use computational fluid dynamics to assess the prevalence of normal stress, in comparison with shear stress, in rotary ventricular assist devices. Our calculations showed normal stresses do occur in rotary ventricular assist devices: the fluid volumes experiencing normal stress above 10 Pa were 0.011 mL (0.092%) and 0.027 mL (0.39%) for the HeartWare HVAD and HeartMate II (HMII), and normal stresses over 100 Pa were present. However, the shear stress volumes were up to two orders of magnitude larger than the normal stress volumes. Considering thresholds for red blood cell and von Willebrand factor deformation by normal and shear stresses, the fluid volumes causing deformation by normal stress were between 2.5 and 5 times the size of those causing deformation by shear stress. The exposure times to the individual normal stress deformation regions were around 1 ms. The results clearly show, for the first time, that while blood within rotary ventricular assist devices experiences more shear stress at much higher magnitudes as compared with normal stress, there is sufficient normal stress exposure present to cause deformation of, and potentially damage to, the blood components. This study is the first to quantify the fluid stress components in real blood contacting devices.


2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (12) ◽  
pp. 735-747 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Torner ◽  
Lucas Konnigk ◽  
Frank-Hendrik Wurm

The blood damage prediction in rotary blood pumps is an important procedure to evaluate the hemocompatibility of such systems. Blood damage is caused by shear stresses to the blood cells and their exposure times. The total impact of an equivalent shear stress can only be taken into account when turbulent stresses are included in the blood damage prediction. The aim of this article was to analyze the influence of the turbulent stresses on the damage prediction in a rotary blood pump’s flow. Therefore, the flow in a research blood pump was computed using large eddy simulations. A highly turbulence-resolving setup was used in order to directly resolve most of the computed stresses. The simulations were performed at the design point and an operation point with lower flow rate. Blood damage was predicted using three damage models (volumetric analysis of exceeded stress thresholds, hemolysis transport equation, and hemolysis approximation via volume integral) and two shear stress definitions (with and without turbulent stresses). For both simulations, turbulent stresses are the dominant stresses away from the walls. Here, they act in a range between 9 and 50 Pa. Nonetheless, the mean stresses in the proximity of the walls reach levels, which are one order of magnitude higher. Due to this, the turbulent stresses have a small impact on the results of the hemolysis prediction. Yet, turbulent stresses should be included in the damage prediction, since they belong to the total equivalent stress definition and could impact the damage on proteins or platelets.


Author(s):  
Jawaad Sheriff ◽  
Michalis Xenos ◽  
João S. Soares ◽  
Jolyon Jesty ◽  
Danny Bluestein

Blood recirculating devices, which include ventricular assist devices and prosthetic heart valves, are necessary for some patients suffering from end-stage heart failure and valvular diseases. However, disturbed flow patterns in these devices cause shear-induced platelet activation and aggregation. Thromboembolic complications resulting from this platelet behavior necessitates lifelong anticoagulant therapy for patients implanted with such devices. In addition, blood recirculating device manufacturers mostly test and optimize their products for hemolysis, which occurs at shear stresses ten-fold higher than required for platelet activation. The relative paucity of optimization for flow-induced thrombogenicity is further exacerbated by the fact that there are few predictive shear-induced platelet activation models.


Author(s):  
Gaurav Girdhar ◽  
Jawaad Sheriff ◽  
Michalis Xenos ◽  
Yared Alemu ◽  
Thomas Claiborne ◽  
...  

Implantable blood recirculation devices such as ventricular assist devices (VADs) and more recently the temporary total artificial heart (TAH-t) are promising bridge-to-transplant (BTT) solutions for patients with end-stage cardiovascular disease. However, blood flow in and around certain non-physiological geometries, mostly associated with pathological flow around mechanical heart valves (MHVs) of these devices, enhances shear stress-induced platelet activation, thereby significantly promoting flow induced thrombogenicity and subsequent complications such as stroke, despite a regimen of post-implant antithrombotic agents. Careful characterization of such localized high shear stress trajectories in these devices by numerical techniques and corresponding experimental measurements of their accentuated effects on platelet activation and sensitization, is therefore critical for effective design optimization of these devices (reducing the occurrence of pathological flow patterns formation) for minimizing thrombogenicity [1].


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 1115-1115
Author(s):  
Tania Torres ◽  
Jeanine M. Walenga ◽  
Bryan Menapace ◽  
Erin Coglianese ◽  
Walter Jeske ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Ventricular assist devices (VADs) are increasingly being used in the clinical management of patients with heart failure. While effective, there are risks associated with the use of a VAD. One of the most serious risks is pump thrombosis characterized by an organized fibrin deposition in the pump, which requires clinical intervention and/or surgical replacement of the device. Due to the growing number of cardiac patients with an implanted VAD, it is important to understand the susceptibility to hemostatic dysregulation among these patients to prevent complications. In current clinical practice VAD pump thrombosis is detected through an elevation in plasma lactate dehydrogenase levels [LDH; >2x upper limit of normal (ULN)]. However, this method of detection is limited by an inability to detect a pump thrombus before it becomes clinically significant. Cellular microparticles (MPs) are submicron membrane-derived exocytotic vesicles that are derived from a variety of cell types by outward blebbing of the plasma membrane in response to activation stimuli. Blood cell-derived MPs can form in response to hemostatic activation, inflammation and altered rheology. The aim of this study was to determine whether levels of cellular MPs can be used more effectively than clinical parameters to predict thrombotic events in VAD patients. Methods: Blood samples were collected peri-operatively and long-term post-operatively (until transplant or expiration) during normal clinic visits from 13 consented patients who were implanted with a HeartMate II LVAD (Thoratec, Pleasanton, CA). Fresh whole blood collected in 3.2% sodium citrate was centrifuged for platelet poor plasma then ultracentrifuged (20,000 g, 90 min) to pellet MPs. Aliquots of the MP rich samples were stained with the dye PKH67 (to identify biological membranes) then separated into five tubes containing either: Tyrode's buffer (control), CD41-PE (platelets), CD45-PE [leukocytes (WBC]), CD146-PE [endothelium (EC)], or CD235-PE [erythrocytes (RBCs)]. Samples were analyzed on an EPICS XL flow cytometer (Beckman-Coulter, Miami, FL) to determine the presence and quantity of cellular MPs using an in-house assay. MPs were identified as PKH67(+) events with a size < 1µm based on size-defined polystyrene beads. Blood samples from 12 healthy individuals were processed in the same manner to establish normal MP levels. A database of clinical events in the LVAD patients was created from medical chart review and included LDH, platelet count, aPTT, D-dimer, fibrinogen and assessment of warfarin by INR. For each patient, clinical and MP data were graphed on a linear time scale; the day that the MP and the clinical values exceeded their ULN was identified and related to time of a clinical adverse event. Results: MP levels in patients without adverse events during the follow-up period (2/13) remained below the ULN of 500 microparticles. Patients with thrombotic episodes (11/13) had elevated levels (2000 to 9000 microparticles) a median 50 days (range 35-391 days) prior to LDH elevation; MP levels reverted to normal following resolution of the event. Platelet and RBC MPs were elevated earlier and to a greater extent than MPs from WBCs and ECs. Some patients (2/11) only had an elevation of RBC MPs. Platelet counts were elevated up to 50 days post-surgery (12/13 patients), but levels were normal at time of the thrombotic event. There was no obvious association with adverse events for INR time out of therapeutic range or any other clinical parameter. Discussion: Microparticle levels in VAD patients with thrombotic events were shown to cross the normal threshold weeks prior to the time when common clinical parameters indicated an abnormality, suggesting that changes in microparticle levels may be useful in predicting thrombotic events. Hypercoagulability in VAD patients can be influenced by a number of factors including exposure of blood to foreign surfaces, altered shear stresses, inflammation and infection. Data from this investigation warrants further study for the incorporation of microparticles into the clinical management of patients with implanted VADs and to determine whether the pattern of change in microparticle subtypes can identify the stimulus for pump thrombosis, leading to more effective prophylactic measures. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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