ABSTRACT
OBJECT: We have used a purely phase-encoded magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique, single-point ramped imaging with T1 enhancement (SPRITE), to investigate the steady, turbulent flow dynamics through a bileaflet mechanical heart valve (BMHV). MATERIALS AND METHODS: We have measured in vitro the turbulent diffusivity and velocity downstream of the valve in two configurations (fully opened and partially opened), which mimic normal and dysfunctional operation. Our constant-time implementation of the MRI measurement is unusually robust to fast turbulent flows, and to artefacts caused by the pyrolytic carbon construction of the valve. RESULTS: Turbulent diffusivity downstream of the normally functioning valve peaks at 1.05 × 10(-6)m(2)/s, while the turbulent diffusivity is higher downstream of the dysfunctional valve (peaking at 3.15 × 10(-6) m(2)/s) and is accompanied by a high-velocity fluid jet and re-circulating flow. The fluid jet is not along the centreline of the valve, as might be anticipated in conventional Doppler echocardiography measurements. CONCLUSION: The nature of motion-sensitized SPRITE makes it unusually capable in turbulent flows and near to boundaries between different magnetic susceptibilities. These qualities have allowed us to compare the three-dimensional flow fields through normal and dysfunctional BMHVs.