Numerical Simulation and Clinical Implications of Stenosis in Coronary Blood Flow
Author(s) -
Junmei Zhang,
Liang Zhong,
Tong Luo,
Yunlong Huo,
Swee Yaw Tan,
Aaron Sung Lung Wong,
Boyang Su,
Min Wan,
Xiaodan Zhao,
Ghassan S. Kassab,
Heow Pueh Lee,
Boo Cheong Khoo,
Chang Wei Kang,
Te Ba,
Ru San Tan
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
biomed research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 2314-6141
pISSN - 2314-6133
DOI - 10.1155/2014/514729
Subject(s) - medicine , fractional flow reserve , stenosis , radiology , cardiology , coronary angiography , computed tomography angiography , angiography , gold standard (test) , myocardial infarction
Fractional flow reserve (FFR) is the gold standard to guide coronary interventions. However it can only be obtained via invasive angiography. The objective of this study is to propose a noninvasive method to determine FFR CT by combining computed tomography angiographic (CTA) images and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) technique. Utilizing the method, this study explored the effects of diameter stenosis (DS), stenosis length, and location on FFR CT . The baseline left anterior descending (LAD) model was reconstructed from CTA of a healthy porcine heart. A series of models were created by adding an idealized stenosis (with DS from 45% to 75%, stenosis length from 4 mm to 16 mm, and at 4 locations separately). Through numerical simulations, it was found that FFR CT decreased (from 0.89 to 0.74), when DS increased (from 45% to 75%). Similarly, FFR CT decreased with the increase of stenosis length and the stenosis located at proximal position had lower FFR CT than that at distal position. These findings are consistent with clinical observations. Applying the same method on two patients' CTA images yielded FFR CT close to the FFR values obtained via invasive angiography. The proposed noninvasive computation of FFR CT is promising for clinical diagnosis of CAD.
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