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Aortic flow after valve sparing root replacement with or without neosinuses reconstruction
Authors:Mario Gaudino  Filippo Piatti  Christopher Lau  Francesco Sturla  Jonathan W. Weinsaft  Luca Weltert  Emiliano Votta  Nicola Galea  Ilaria Chirichilli  Antonino Di Franco  Marco Francone  Carlo Catalano  Alberto Redaelli  Leonard N. Girardi  Ruggero De Paulis
Affiliation:1. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City, NY;4. Department of Medicine (Cardiology), Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY;2. Department of Electronics, Information, and Bioengineering, Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy;3. 3D and Computer Simulation Laboratory, IRCCS Policlinico San Donato, San Donato Milanese, Italy;5. Department of Cardiac Surgery, European Hospital, Rome, Italy;6. Department of Experimental Medicine, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy;7. Department of Radiological, Oncological, and Pathological Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy
Abstract:

Objectives

This study applied advanced 4-dimensional flow magnetic resonance imaging processing to assess differences in aortic flow dynamics after valve sparing root replacement, with and without reconstruction of the Valsalva sinuses.

Methods

We enrolled patients after valve sparing root replacement with a straight tubular prosthesis (n = 10) or with a prosthesis with Valsalva neosinuses (n = 10); age-matched subjects without cardiovascular diseases served as controls (n = 10). 4-Dimensional flow magnetic resonance imaging acquisitions were performed on a 3.0T magnetic resonance imaging unit. In-house processing was used to segment the aortic lumen and extract the volumetric 4-dimensional flow velocity field. Velocity flow streamlines were computed to compare the amount of rotational flow and wall shear stress. Occurrence of abnormal wall shear stress (WSS) was estimated within the descending aorta of each surgical group.

Results

Physiologic-like sinus vortices were visible in the aortic root when using the prosthesis with neosinuses, whereas straight tubular graft revealed localized intrados malrotations (P = .003 for organized vortical structures vs neosinuses graft and P < .001 vs control). In the ascending aorta, recreation of the sinuses resulted in significantly lower velocity and WSS than in the straight tubular graft (P < .001) and controls (P < .001), these alterations were attenuated in the mid-descending aorta. Incidence of abnormal WSS was markedly higher in the straight tube grafts than neosinus of Valsalva grafts.

Conclusions

Re-creation of the sinuses of Valsalva during valve-sparing root replacement is associated with more physiologic flow and significantly lower WSS in the aortic root. Lower WSSs in the distal thoracic aorta is a novel finding with potential implications on distal aortic remodeling.
Keywords:aorta  4D MRI  valve-sparing surgery  flow  3D  3-dimensional  4D flow  3-dimensional flow-sensitive cardiac magnetic resonance  AWSS-90  at-risk areas  BA  Bland-Altman  CMR  cardiac magnetic resonance  CMRA  contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography  EHR  European Hospital/Rome  LV  left ventricle  neo-SV  re-creation of anatomically shaped sinuses of Valsalva  ROIAo  3-dimensional lumen of the aorta  SV  sinuses of Valsalva  VENC  velocity encoding  maximum value of velocity  mean value of velocity  VSRR  valve-sparing aortic root replacement  WCMC  NY Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medicine  WSS  wall shear stress  wall shear stress directed along the axial direction of the vessel wall  wall shear stress directed along the circumferential direction of the vessel wall  maximum value of wall shear stress  mean value of wall shear stress magnitude
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