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BACKGROUND: Fontan physiology, reliant on a single ventricle and a passive total cavopulmonary connection (TCPC) flow, is vulnerable to inefficiency. Linking TCPC power loss to cardiac function can provide valuable insights into Fontan hemodynamics. This study quantifies direct TCPC power loss from invasive cardiac magnetic resonance (iCMR) data and its relationship to conduit geometry, fenestration flow, and myocardial contractility pre- and post-Fontan fenestration test occlusion (FFTO). METHODS: Twenty post-Fontan patients underwent iCMR, with 9 also having a FFTO. iCMR catheter-based pressures were combined with phase-contrast CMR flow in the vena cavae and pulmonary arteries. 3D whole-heart imaging provided conduit cross-sectional areas (CSA). A patient-specific biomechanical model estimated myocardial contractility from iCMR data. In-vivo TCPC blood flow indexed power loss (iPL) was calculated at baseline in 20 patients, and post- FFTO in 9. RESULTS: =0.43, p=0.054) post-FFTO. Higher iPL correlated with smaller conduit CSA (R²=0.26, p=0.030) at baseline. CONCLUSION: Increased iPL was related to increased fenestration flow, increased contractility and decreased conduit narrowing at baseline. Post-FFTO, increased iPL was associated with decreased contractility suggesting that acute fenestration closure might cause preload suppression in the ventricle. This study offers a clinically relevant framework to obtain mechanistic insights into Fontan physiology and guide personalized strategies fenestration management.
Dahshi et al. (Wed,) studied this question.