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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 85, 893-901, Copyright © 1983 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
KB Chandran, B Khalighi, CJ Chen, HL Falsetti, TL Yearwood and LF Hiratzka
The effect of valve orientation on flow development in a model human aorta
was studied by means of a qualitative flow visualization technique. The
model replicated the geometry of the human aorta and the experiment
simulated a physiologically realistic pulsatile flow. The following valves
were studied: Starr-Edwards Stellite, Starr-Edwards silicone, Bjork-Shiley
spherical disc, Bjork-Shiley convexo-concave disc, and Hall-Kaster tilting
disc. All the valves had a tissue anulus diameter of 27 mm. With the
ball-in-cage valves, the flow in the ascending aorta was predominantly
axial and uniform throughout systole, while vortex formation was observed
downstream from the ball. With the tilting disc valves, the flow
development in the aorta was a function of the orientation of the valves.
With the major flow orifice directed toward the commissure between the
right and noncoronary cusps, the fluid motion was predominantly in the
axial direction through early systole. A vortex developed along the wall of
lesser curvature of the aorta with the progression of systole. In early
diastole, a well- defined flow reversal was observed along the lesser
curvature of the aorta. With the major flow orifice directed toward the
left coronary cusp, the fluid motion, although predominantly axial, was not
uniform in the ascending aorta. Regions of relative stasis present near the
wall of greater curvature subsequently developed into a trapped vortex
throughout the cardiac cycle. With the major flow orifice directed more
posteriorly, an improved fluid dynamic characteristic was observed, and
there was no trapped vortex present near the wall of greater curvature. The
flow visualization study in the model human aorta suggests that, from a
fluid dynamic point of view, orientation of the major flow orifice of the
tilting disc valve toward the wall of lesser curvature is not advisable.
ARTICLES
Effect of valve orientation on flow development past aortic valve prostheses in a model human aorta
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