AI Article Synopsis

  • The use of ventricular assist devices (VADs) is rising due to a shortage of organ donors and more patients with advanced heart failure.
  • The study explored how left ventricular (LV) size affects blood flow dynamics and the risk of blood clots (thrombosis) in patients using VADs, using advanced modeling techniques.
  • Findings indicate that smaller LV sizes lead to higher shear stress on platelets and longer residence times, increasing the likelihood of blood clots, suggesting LV size is a key factor in thrombus formation rather than just the speed of the VAD.

Article Abstract

The prevalence of ventricular assist device (VAD) therapy has continued to increase due to a stagnant donor supply and growing advanced heart failure (HF) population. We hypothesize that left ventricular (LV) size strongly influences biocompatibility and risk of thrombosis. Unsteady computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was used in conjunction with patient-derived computational modeling and virtual surgery with a standard, apically implanted inflow cannula. A dual-focus approach of evaluating thrombogenicity was employed: platelet-based metrics to characterize the platelet environment and flow-based metrics to investigate hemodynamics. Left ventricular end-diastolic dimensions (LVEDds) ranging from 4.5 to 6.5 cm were studied and ranked according to relative thrombogenic potential. Over 150,000 platelets were individually tracked in each LV model over 15 cardiac cycles. As LV size decreased, platelets experienced markedly increased shear stress histories (SHs), whereas platelet residence time (RT) in the LV increased with size. The complex interplay between increased SH and longer RT has profound implications on thrombogenicity, with a significantly higher proportion of platelets in small LVs having long RT times and being subjected to high SH, contributing to thrombus formation. Our data suggest that small LV size, rather than decreased VAD speed, is the primary pathologic mechanism responsible for the increased incidence of thrombosis observed in VAD patients with small LVs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6193874PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MAT.0000000000000798DOI Listing

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