In patients with mechanical heart valves (MHVs), transcranial Doppler methods commonly detect high intensity transient signals (HITS) representing microemboli. These microemboli, which are presumably gaseous, may cause stroke and cognitive deterioration. A bovine model was therefore developed for studying the relationship between mitral MHV induced HITS and potential etiogenic factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Heart Valve Dis
March 1999
Investigations of convexo-concave (C/C) valve outlet strut fractures (OSFs) were initially confounded by knowledge that the strut was subject to bending forces in arresting the opening disc. Pulse duplicator studies subsequently showed that closing loads were all born by the inlet strut, along with an understandable focus on the nature of the welds, where most fractures occurred. As observations of explanted valves accumulated, certain features pointed to unusual closing loads that might be contributory factors, but these hypothetical forces could not be verified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Modified cineradiographic systems have been used clinically to detect partially broken outlet struts in normally functioning Björk-Shiley convexo-concave heart valves. Almost all such valves were explanted, presuming that full failure would likely follow. Inasmuch as the clinical setting only rarely permits examination of normally rated valves, the accuracy of radiographic detection cannot be clinically defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cone-kernel distribution (CKD) is first applied to the analysis of the intracardiac and the thoracic first heart sound (S1) of dogs in various cardiac contractile states, and secondly to the S1 of patients with mitral mechanical prosthetic heart valves. The CKD of native S1 in dogs shows that the dominant components of S1 are generally concentrated in a band at around 50 Hz with a horizontal flat or a semi-lunar shape, independently of the myocardial contractile state. There is no significant systematic rising frequency component.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Several lines of evidence indicate a two-stage failure mode for the Björk-Shiley convexo-concave (C/C) heart valve, in which one of the two outlet strut legs separates from the flange before the other, potentially providing an opportunity to identify and prophylactically replace failure-prone valves. Radiographic single leg separation (SLS) detection, although successful, is subjective and skill intensive, implying a need for both an objective preliminary screen and subsequent corroboration of the radiographic findings.
Methods And Results: We developed a time-windowed, power density analysis of C/C valve closing sounds to detect the vibrational resonance that characterizes the presence of an intact outlet strut in clinically functioning, 29-mm-flange size C/C valves.