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Flow Measurement at the Pump Head of Centrifugal Pumps: Comparison of Ultrasonic Transit Time and Ultrasonic Doppler Systems
Author(s) -
Schima Heinrich,
Huber Leopold,
Schmallegger Helmut,
Drost Cornelis J.,
Droudt Andrew,
Wieselthaler Georg,
Losert Udo
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
artificial organs
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.684
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1525-1594
pISSN - 0160-564X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1525-1594.1997.tb03748.x
Subject(s) - ultrasonic flow meter , ultrasonic sensor , flow measurement , vorticity , centrifugal pump , blood flow , flow (mathematics) , acoustics , mechanics , doppler effect , vortex , physics , materials science , impeller , medicine , astronomy
Determination of blood flow is essential for monitoring rotary blood pumps. However, accurate measurement directly adjacent to the pump housing is difficult because of the highly irregular flow profiles near the fast spinning rotor. Therefore, a specially adapted flow probe based on the ultrasound transit time (USTT) principle was designed to evaluate the flow in centrifugal blood pumps. The probe can be directly mounted at the housing and creates 2 crossed measuring ultrasound beams. The mean value, Q m , of the 2 output signals corresponds to the blood flow and the difference, Q d , correlates to the vorticity of the flow profile in the pump outflow tract. In vitro measurements obtained an accuracy for mean flow values of better than ±0.6 L/min in extreme working points and for vorticity values even as high as Q d = 3.5 L/min. Because of vorticity, however, the output signal contained considerable noise, and that required the application of a 10 Hz filter. Positioning of the ultrasound (US) beams parallel to the axial direction of the pump was superior to radial positioning. Additional measurement of the flow profile demonstrated that a large vorticity occurred (up to Q d equal to 3.5 L/min), and this vorticity was highly dependent upon the afterload of the pump. In vivo experiments demonstrated the reliability of the method. We concluded that USTT flow measurement can determine blood flow immediately adjacent to the pump housing with sufficient accuracy, and these measurements are superior to those from US‐Doppler systems (which cannot handle the vorticity accurately enough) and electromagnetic devices (which lack zero stability).