Unlocking the Non-invasive Assessment of Conduit and Reservoir Function in the Aorta

  • de Vecchi A
  • Faraci A
  • Fernandes J
  • et al.
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Abstract

Aortic surgeries in congenital conditions, such as hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS), aim to restore and maintain the conduit and reservoir functions of the aorta. We proposed a method to assess these two functions based on 4D flow MRI, and we applied it to study the aorta in pre-Fontan HLHS. Ten pre-Fontan HLHS patients and six age-matched controls were studied to derive the advective pressure difference and viscous dissipation for conduit function, and pulse wave velocity and elastic modulus for reservoir function. The reconstructed neo-aorta in HLHS subjects achieved a good conduit function at a cost of an impaired reservoir function (69.7% increase of elastic modulus). The native descending HLHS aorta displayed enhanced reservoir (elastic modulus being 18.4% smaller) but impaired conduit function (three-fold increase in peak advection). A non-invasive and comprehensive assessment of aortic conduit and reservoir functions is feasible and has potentially clinical relevance in congenital vascular conditions. Graphical abstract

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APA

de Vecchi, A., Faraci, A., Fernandes, J. F., Marlevi, D., Bellsham-Revell, H., Hussain, T., … Lamata, P. (2022). Unlocking the Non-invasive Assessment of Conduit and Reservoir Function in the Aorta. Journal of Cardiovascular Translational Research, 15(5), 1075–1085. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12265-022-10221-4

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