4.8 Article Proceedings Paper

How Do Annuloplasty Rings Affect Mitral Annular Strains in the Normal Beating Ovine Heart?

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 126, Issue 11, Pages S231-S238

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.111.084046

Keywords

animal model; annulus; mitral regurgitation; mitral valve; strain; surgery

Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [P41 RR008605] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01 HL029589, HL29589, R01 HL067025, R01 HL67025] Funding Source: Medline
  3. Directorate For Engineering
  4. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [0952021, 1233054] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Background-We hypothesized that annuloplasty ring implantation alters mitral annular strains in a normal beating ovine heart preparation. Methods and Results-Sheep had 16 radiopaque markers sewn equally spaced around the mitral annulus. Edwards Cosgrove partial flexible band (COS; n = 12), St Jude complete rigid saddle-shaped annuloplasty ring (RSA; n = 10), Carpentier-Edwards Physio (PHY; n = 11), Edwards IMR ETlogix (ETL; n = 11), and GeoForm (GEO; n = 12) annuloplasty rings were implanted in a releasable fashion. Four-dimensional marker coordinates were obtained using biplane videofluoroscopy with the ring inserted (ring) and after ring release (control). From marker coordinates, a functional spatio-temporal representation of each annulus was generated through a best fit using 16 piecewise cubic Hermitian splines. Absolute total mitral annular ring strains were calculated from the relative change in length of the tangent vector to the annular curve as strains occurring from control to ring state at end-systole. In addition, average Green-Lagrange strains occurring from control to ring state at end-systole along the annulus were calculated. Absolute total mitral annular ring strains were smallest for COS and greatest for ETL. Strains for RSA, PHY, and GEO were similar. Except for COS in the septal mitral annular segment, all rings induced compressive strains along the entire annulus, with greatest values occurring at the lateral mitral annular segment. Conclusions-In healthy, beating ovine hearts, annuloplasty rings (COS, RSA, PHY, ETL, and GEO) induce compressive strains that are predominate in the lateral annular region, smallest for flexible partial bands (COS) and greatest for an asymmetrical rigid ring type with intrinsic septal-lateral downsizing (ETL). However, the ring type with the most drastic intrinsic septal-lateral downsizing (GEO) introduced strains similar to physiologically shaped rings (RSA and PHY), indicating that ring effects on annular strain profiles cannot be estimated from the degree of septal-lateral downsizing. (Circulation. 2012; 126[suppl 1]:S231-S238.)

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