Computational Modeling of Aortic Stenosis with a Reduced Degree-Of-Freedom Fluid-Structure Interaction Valve Model

Author(s):  
Chi Zhu ◽  
Jung-Hee Seo ◽  
Rajat Mittal

Abstract In this study, a novel reduced degree-of-freedom (rDOF) aortic valve model is employed to investigate the fluid-structure interaction and hemodynamics associated with aortic stenosis. The dynamics of the valve leaflets are determined by an ordinary differential equation with two parameters and this rDOF model is shown to reproduce key features of more complex valve models. The hemodynamics associated with aortic stenosis is studied for three cases: a healthy case and two stenosed cases. The focus of the study is to correlate the hemodynamic features with the source generation mechanism of systolic murmurs associated with aortic stenosis. In the healthy case, extremely weak flow fluctuations are observed. However, in the stenosed cases, simulations show significant turbulent fluctuations in the asending aorta, which are responsible for the generation of strong wall pressure fluctuations after the aortic root mostly during the deceleration phase of the systole. The intensity of the murmur generation increases with the severity of the stenosis, and the source locations for the two diseased cases studied here lies around 1.0 inlet duct diameters ($D_o$) downstream of the ascending aorta.

Author(s):  
Solomon C. Yim ◽  
Huan Lin ◽  
David C. Robinson ◽  
Katsuji Tanizawa

The predictive capability of two-dimensional (2D) fully-nonlinear-potential-flow (FNPF) models of an experimental submerged moored sphere system subjected to waves is examined in this study. The experimental system considered includes both single-degree-of-freedom (SDOF) surge-only and two-degree-of-freedom (2DOF) surge-heave coupled motions, with main sources of nonlinearity from free surface boundary, large geometry, and coupled fluid-structure interaction. The FNPF models that track the nonlinear free-surface boundary exactly hence can accurately model highly nonlinear (nonbreaking) waves. To examine the predictive capability of the approximate 2D models and keep the computational effort manageable, the structural sphere is converted to an equivalent 2D cylinder. Fluid-structure interaction is coupled through an implicit boundary condition enforcing the instantaneous dynamic equilibrium between the fluid and the structure. The numerical models are first calibrated using free-vibration test results and then employed to investigate the wave-excited experimental responses via comparisons of time history and frequency response diagrams. Under monochromatic wave excitations, both SDOF and 2DOF models exhibit complex nonlinear experimental responses including coexistence, harmonics, subharmonics, and superharmonics. It is found that the numerical models can predict the general qualitative nonlinear behavior, harmonic and subharmonic responses as well as bifurcation structure. However, the predictive capability of the models deteriorates for superharmonic resonance possibly due to three-dimensional (3D) effects including diffraction and reflection. To accurately predict the nonlinear behavior of moored sphere motions in the highly sensitive response region, it is recommended that the more computationally intensive 3D numerical models be employed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 30 (12) ◽  
pp. 1597-1613 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hao Gao ◽  
Xingshuang Ma ◽  
Nan Qi ◽  
Colin Berry ◽  
Boyce E. Griffith ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Milan Toma ◽  
Daniel R. Einstein ◽  
Charles H. Bloodworth ◽  
Richard P. Cochran ◽  
Ajit P. Yoganathan ◽  
...  

Prosthesis ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 65-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milan Toma ◽  
Daniel R. Einstein ◽  
Charles H. Bloodworth ◽  
Keshav Kohli ◽  
Richard P. Cochran ◽  
...  

Mitral regurgitation imposes a significant symptomatic burden on patients who are not candidates for conventional surgery. For these patients, transcatheter repair and replacement devices are emerging as alternative options. One such device is an intravalvular balloon or spacer that is inserted between the mitral valve leaflets to fill the gap that gives rise to mitral regurgitation. In this study, we apply a large-deformation fluid-structure interaction analysis to a fully 3D subject-specific mitral valve model to assess the efficacy of the intra-valvular spacer for reducing mitral regurgitation severity. The model includes a topologically 3D subvalvular apparatus with unprecedented detail. Results show that device fixation and anchoring at the location of the subject’s regurgitant orifice is imperative for optimal reduction of mitral regurgitation.


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