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1.
J Biomech ; 21(7): 545-62, 1988.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3410858

ABSTRACT

In order to obtain mechanical specifications for the design of an artificial leaflet valve prosthesis, a geometrically non-linear numerical model is developed of a closed Hancock leaflet valve prosthesis. In this model, the fibre reinforcement of the leaflet and the viscoelastic properties of frame and leaflets are incorporated. The calculations are primarily restricted to 1/6 part of the valve and a time varying pressure load is applied. The calculations are verified experimentally by measuring the commissure displacements and leaflet centre displacement of a Hancock valve. The numerically obtained commissure displacements are found to be linearly dependent on the pressure load, and the slope of the curves is hardly dependent on loading type and loading velocity. Experimentally a difference is found between the three commissure displacements, which is also predicted numerically using a simplified asymmetric total valve model. Besides, experimentally a clear dependency of commissure displacements on frame size is found. For the leaflet centre displacement, a qualitative agreement exists between numerical prediction and experimental result, although the numerical predicted values are systematically higher. The numerically obtained stress distributions revealed that the maximum von Mises intensity in the membranes occurs in the vicinity of the commissure in the free leaflet area (0.2 N mm-2). Wrinkling of the membranes may occur in the coaptation area near the leaflet suspension. The maximum fibre stress is found near the aortic ring in the fibres which form the boundaries of the coaptation area (0.64 N mm-2). These locations seem to correlate with some common regions of tissue valve failure.


Subject(s)
Heart Valve Prosthesis , Computer Simulation , Models, Cardiovascular , Motion , Pressure , Prosthesis Design
2.
J Biomech Eng ; 106(3): 198-203, 1984 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6492764

ABSTRACT

Using the quasi-linear viscoelastic model proposed by Fung for the description of the viscoelastic properties of soft biological tissues, the parameters governing their time-dependent behavior are commonly estimated from relaxation experiments. Exact quantification is possible from the response to a step change in the strain. Since it is physically impossible to realize a true step change in the strain, in practice the response to a steplike strain change is used. In the present study the discrepancies between the exact and the estimated parameter values are investigated using a hypothetical quasi-linear viscoelastic material. The parameter tau 1, governing the fast viscous phenomena, is found to be subject to the largest errors. Methods for obtaining better estimates of tau 1 are outlined in a number of special cases.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Engineering , Elasticity , Viscosity , Models, Biological
3.
J Biomech ; 17(2): 145-53, 1984.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6725294

ABSTRACT

In this paper an equipment is described for the loading of heart valve prostheses under physiological pressure conditions at a frequency of 10 Hz. The system consists essentially of two reservoirs between which a housing is mounted for holding the valve prosthesis. The reservoirs are partly filled with liquid. The physiological pressure variation across the valve is obtained by pressure control within the two reservoirs. A phase difference between the pressures in the two reservoirs compensates for the mass-inertia effects which normally occur at these high frequencies. The system without a valve has been analysed on the basis of simplified relationships between pressure and flow. The predicted values for the phase difference between the flow and the pressure curves within the valve housing, have been verified experimentally for various values of phase difference and amplitude ratios of the pressure variations within the reservoirs. The agreement between theory and experiment is fair. For the system with a valve the experimentally observed patterns closely resemble the theoretically predicted ones. From experiments with a Björk-Shiley ( 21ABP ) and a Hancock (242-A21) valve prosthesis it is concluded that the valves open and close completely and that the pressure and flow patterns around the valves mimic the essential features of the in-vivo signals.


Subject(s)
Aortic Valve/physiology , Heart Valve Prosthesis , Rheology , Biomechanical Phenomena , Bioprosthesis , Hemodynamics , Humans , Models, Anatomic , Prosthesis Design
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