Native and prosthetic heart valves (caged-ball, tilting-disc, bileaflet mechanical valves, porcine and pericardial stented and nonstented bioprosthetic valves)
This review provides a comprehensive overview of the fluid mechanics and hemodynamic performance of native and various prosthetic heart valve designs.
Valvular heart disease is a life-threatening disease that afflicts millions of people worldwide and leads to approximately 250,000 valve repairs and/or replacements each year. Malfunction of a native valve impairs its efficient fluid mechanic/hemodynamic performance. Artificial heart valves have been used since 1960 to replace diseased native valves and have saved millions of lives. Unfortunately, despite four decades of use, these devices are less than ideal and lead to many complications. Many of these complications/problems are directly related to the fluid mechanics associated with the various mechanical and bioprosthetic valve designs. This review focuses on the state-of-the-art experimental and computational fluid mechanics of native and prosthetic heart valves in current clinical use. The fluid dynamic performance characteristics of caged-ball, tilting-disc, bileaflet mechanical valves and porcine and pericardial stented and nonstented bioprostheic valves are reviewed. Other issues related to heart valve performance, such as biomaterials, solid mechanics, tissue mechanics, and durability, are not addressed in this review.
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Ajit P. Yoganathan
Structural Heart Disease
Zhaoming He
Texas Tech University
S. Casey Jones
University of Arizona
Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering
Georgia Institute of Technology
The Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering
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Yoganathan et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69df8b42915fa04953614ded — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.bioeng.6.040803.140111