Pulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigation

Single ventricle heart defects, where systemic and pulmonary venous returns mix in the single functional ventricle, represent the most complex form of congenital heart defect, affecting 2 babies per 1000 live births. Surgical repairs, termed "Fontan Repairs," reroute the systemic venous re...

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Main Author: de Julien de Zelicourt, Diane Alicia
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2011
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/39549
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-395492013-01-07T20:37:25ZPulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigationde Julien de Zelicourt, Diane AliciaSingle ventricle heart defectsTotal cavopulmonary connectionVirtual surgeryUnstructured immersed boundary methodHeart Abnormalities SurgeryCongenital heart diseaseHemodynamicsComputational fluid dynamicsSingle ventricle heart defects, where systemic and pulmonary venous returns mix in the single functional ventricle, represent the most complex form of congenital heart defect, affecting 2 babies per 1000 live births. Surgical repairs, termed "Fontan Repairs," reroute the systemic venous return directly to the pulmonary arteries, thus preventing venous return mixing and restoring normal oxygenation saturation levels. Unfortunately, these repairs are only palliative and Fontan patients are subjected to a multitude of chronic complications. It has long been suspected that hemodynamics play a role in determining patient outcome. However, the number of anatomical and functional variables that come into play and the inability to conduct large scale clinical evaluations, due to too small a patient population, has hindered decisive progress and there is still not a good understanding of the optimal care strategies on a patient-by-patient basis. Over the past decades, image-guided computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has arisen as an attractive option to accurately model such complex biomedical phenomena, providing a high degree of freedom regarding the geometry and flow conditions to be simulated, and carrying the potential to be automated for large sample size studies. Despite these theoretical advantages, few CFD studies have been able to account for the complexity of patient-specific anatomies and in vivo pulsatile flows. In this thesis, we develop an unstructured Cartesian immersed-boundary flow solver allowing for high resolution, time-accurate simulations in arbitrarily complex geometries, at low computational costs. Combining the proposed and validated CFD solver with an interactive virtual-surgery environment, we present an image-based surgical planning framework that: a) allows for in depth analysis of the pre-operative in vivo hemodynamics; b) enables surgeons to determine the optimum surgical scenario prior to the operation. This framework is first applied to retrospectively investigate the in vivo pulsatile hemodynamics of different Fontan repair techniques, and quantitatively compare their efficiency. We then report the prospective surgical planning investigations conducted for six failing Fontan patients with an interrupted inferior vena cava and azygous continuation. In addition to a direct benefit to the patients under consideration, the knowledge derived from these surgical planning studies will also have a larger impact for the clinical management of Fontan patients as they shed light onto the impact of caval offset, vessel flaring and other design parameters upon the Fontan hemodynamics depending on the underlying patient anatomy. These results provide useful surgical guidelines for each anatomical template, which could benefit the global surgical community, including centers that do not have access to patient-specific surgical planning interfaces.Georgia Institute of Technology2011-07-06T16:46:40Z2011-07-06T16:46:40Z2010-04-06Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/39549
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Single ventricle heart defects
Total cavopulmonary connection
Virtual surgery
Unstructured immersed boundary method
Heart Abnormalities Surgery
Congenital heart disease
Hemodynamics
Computational fluid dynamics
spellingShingle Single ventricle heart defects
Total cavopulmonary connection
Virtual surgery
Unstructured immersed boundary method
Heart Abnormalities Surgery
Congenital heart disease
Hemodynamics
Computational fluid dynamics
de Julien de Zelicourt, Diane Alicia
Pulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigation
description Single ventricle heart defects, where systemic and pulmonary venous returns mix in the single functional ventricle, represent the most complex form of congenital heart defect, affecting 2 babies per 1000 live births. Surgical repairs, termed "Fontan Repairs," reroute the systemic venous return directly to the pulmonary arteries, thus preventing venous return mixing and restoring normal oxygenation saturation levels. Unfortunately, these repairs are only palliative and Fontan patients are subjected to a multitude of chronic complications. It has long been suspected that hemodynamics play a role in determining patient outcome. However, the number of anatomical and functional variables that come into play and the inability to conduct large scale clinical evaluations, due to too small a patient population, has hindered decisive progress and there is still not a good understanding of the optimal care strategies on a patient-by-patient basis. Over the past decades, image-guided computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has arisen as an attractive option to accurately model such complex biomedical phenomena, providing a high degree of freedom regarding the geometry and flow conditions to be simulated, and carrying the potential to be automated for large sample size studies. Despite these theoretical advantages, few CFD studies have been able to account for the complexity of patient-specific anatomies and in vivo pulsatile flows. In this thesis, we develop an unstructured Cartesian immersed-boundary flow solver allowing for high resolution, time-accurate simulations in arbitrarily complex geometries, at low computational costs. Combining the proposed and validated CFD solver with an interactive virtual-surgery environment, we present an image-based surgical planning framework that: a) allows for in depth analysis of the pre-operative in vivo hemodynamics; b) enables surgeons to determine the optimum surgical scenario prior to the operation. This framework is first applied to retrospectively investigate the in vivo pulsatile hemodynamics of different Fontan repair techniques, and quantitatively compare their efficiency. We then report the prospective surgical planning investigations conducted for six failing Fontan patients with an interrupted inferior vena cava and azygous continuation. In addition to a direct benefit to the patients under consideration, the knowledge derived from these surgical planning studies will also have a larger impact for the clinical management of Fontan patients as they shed light onto the impact of caval offset, vessel flaring and other design parameters upon the Fontan hemodynamics depending on the underlying patient anatomy. These results provide useful surgical guidelines for each anatomical template, which could benefit the global surgical community, including centers that do not have access to patient-specific surgical planning interfaces.
author de Julien de Zelicourt, Diane Alicia
author_facet de Julien de Zelicourt, Diane Alicia
author_sort de Julien de Zelicourt, Diane Alicia
title Pulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigation
title_short Pulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigation
title_full Pulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigation
title_fullStr Pulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigation
title_full_unstemmed Pulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigation
title_sort pulsatile fontan hemodynamics and patient-specific surgical planning: a numerical investigation
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/39549
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