Numéro |
J. Phys. III France
Volume 4, Numéro 6, June 1994
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Page(s) | 1121 - 1127 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/jp3:1994103 |
J. Phys. III France 4 (1994) 1121-1127
Trends in cardiac dynamics : towards coupled models of intracavity fluid dynamics and deformable wall mechanics
G. Pelle, J. Ohayon and C. OddouLaboratoire de Mécanique Physique and INSERM U2, Université Paris Val de Marne, 94010 Créteil, France
(Received 25 August 1992, revised 22 December 1993, accepted 2 March 1994)
Abstract
We report here preliminary results in the development of a computational model in cardiac
mechanics which takes into account the coupled effects of ventricular mechanics and
intracardiac hemodynamics. In this first work, complex geometrical, architectural and
rheological properties of the organ have been strongly simplified in order to propose a
"quasi-analytical" model. We assume axisymmetrical geometry of the ventricle and myocardium
material to be made of a sheath of a composite, collagenic, fibrous and active muscle medium
inside which the blood dynamics is dominated by unsteady inertial effects. Moreover, we have
made grossly simplifying assumptions concerning rather stringent and unusual functioning
conditions about the mechanical behavior of the input and output valvular and vascular
impedances as well as the biochemical action of the fiber. By imposing the time variation of
the input and output flow rate and activation function, it is possible, assuming uniformity
of the pressure stresses applied to the internal wall surface at every instant of the cardiac
cycle, to calculate the overall distribution of fluid pressure and velocity inside the cavity
as well as the distributions of stresses and strains inside the wall. It was shown that under
the action of a given biochemical activation function, both kinematics of the wall and
induced motion of the fluid are such that the boundary conditions concerning normal pressure
stresses conservation was constantly satisfied. Moreover, the results concerning the dynamics
of the blood flow, as viewed through the human clinical investigations using velocimetric
technology based upon color doppler ultrasound, are in accordance with those obtained from
such a model, at least during the ejection phase. In particular, contrarily to the filling
phase processes, the ejection dynamics is such that the time evolution of the blood velocity
measured along the cavity axis does not display any phase shift characterizing an effect
similar to a velocity propagation phenomenon. This model reveals to be interesting by its
dual point of view permitting to characterize the cardiac performance from both the fluid and
envelope kinematics data, given a few number of parameters related to the geometrical and
rheological properties of the heart.
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