Simulation of Mitral Valve Plasticity in Response to Myocardial Infarction.

Ann Biomed Eng

James T. Willerson Center for Cardiovascular Modeling and Simulation, Oden Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences and the Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Left ventricular myocardial infarction (MI) can disrupt cardiac function and often leads to ischemic mitral regurgitation (IMR), a condition where the mitral valve does not close properly, resulting in severe health risks.
  • Various treatments for IMR have limited effectiveness due to the significant changes in the mitral valve’s structure and function post-MI, which are not yet fully understood.
  • A new computational model has been developed to simulate mitral valve remodeling after MI, indicating that the valve undergoes permanent deformations in response to changes in pressure and environment within the first eight weeks, with potential for better understanding and treatment of IMR.

Article Abstract

Left ventricular myocardial infarction (MI) has broad and debilitating effects on cardiac function. In many cases, MI leads to ischemic mitral regurgitation (IMR), a condition characterized by incompetency of the mitral valve (MV). IMR has many deleterious effects as well as a high mortality rate. While various clinical treatments for IMR exist, success of these procedures remains limited, in large part because IMR dramatically alters the geometry and function of the MV in ways that are currently not well understood. Previous investigations of post-MI MV remodeling have elucidated that MV tissues have a significant ability to undergo a form of permanent inelastic deformations in the first phase of the post-MI period. These changes appear to be attributable to the altered loading and boundary conditions on the MV itself, as opposed to an independent pathophysiological process. Mechanistically, these results suggest that the MV mostly responds passively to MI during the first 8 weeks post-MI by undergoing a permanent deformation. In the present study, we developed the first computational model of this post-MI MV remodeling process, which we term "mitral valve plasticity." Integrating methodologies and insights from previous studies of in vivo ovine MV function, image-based patient-specific model development, and post-MI MV adaptation, we constructed a representative geometric model of a pre-MI MV. We then performed finite element simulations of the entire MV apparatus under time-dependent boundary conditions and accounting for changes to material properties equivalent to those observed 0-8 weeks post-MI. Our results suggest that during this initial period of adaptation, the MV response to MI can be accurately modeled using a soft tissue plasticity approach, similar to permanent set frameworks that have been applied previously in the context of exogenously crosslinked tissues.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10439-022-03043-7DOI Listing

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