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Journal ArticleDOI

LDA Measurements of Mean Velocity and Reynolds Stress Fields Within an Artificial Heart Ventricle

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TLDR
Measurements of mean velocity patterns indicate that the surfaces of the blood sac and valve tracts are exposed to significant levels of wall shear stress during some portion of the flow cycle, and there is no location where the flow is stagnant over the entire flow cycle.
Abstract
Laser Doppler Anemometry measurements of mean (ensemble average) velocities and turbulent (Reynolds) stresses at 140 locations within the left ventricle of the Penn State 70 cc electric artificial heart/ventricular assist device are reported at 8 times during the cardiac cycle. Mean velocity patterns indicate that the surfaces of the blood sac and valve tracts are exposed to significant levels of wall shear stress (good wall washing) during some portion of the flow cycle, and there is no location where the flow is stagnant over the entire flow cycle. This implies that thrombus deposition within the artificial heart should be suppressed. Turbulent stresses in the main pumping chamber and the outflow tracts of the tilting disk valves do not exceed 2000 dynes/cm2. The highest turbulent stresses (20,000 dynes/cm2) and smallest turbulent microscales (6 microns) are found in the regurgitant jets on the minor orifice side of the aortic valve during diastole and the mitral valve during systole. Taken together, the data suggest that improvements in artificial heart fluid mechanics will come through valve design and pump operating conditions, not pumping chamber design.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Turbulent Stresses upon Mechanical Hemolysis: Experimental and Computational Analysis

TL;DR: bench studies demonstrated that, at the same wall shear stress in a capillary tube, the level of hemolysis was significantly greater for turbulent flow as compared with laminar flow, confirming that turbulent stresses contribute strongly to blood mechanical trauma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of Hemodynamic Forces Induced by Mechanical Heart Valves: Reynolds vs. Viscous Stresses

TL;DR: The overall levels of the viscous stresses are apparently too low to induce damage to red blood cells, but could potentially damage platelets, and it is shown that the so-called Reynolds shear stresses neither directly contribute to the mechanical load on blood cells nor is a proper measurement of the mechanical Load experienced by blood cells.
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A reevaluation and discussion on the threshold limit for hemolysis in a turbulent shear flow

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a two-component laser Doppler anemometer and determined major principal Reynolds shear stress, to reevaluate the hemolytic threshold as 800 N/m(2) with an exposure time of 1 ms.
Journal ArticleDOI

A novel formulation for blood trauma prediction by a modified power-law mathematical model

TL;DR: The obtained results have to be considered a preliminary validation of the basic hypothesis of this modified red blood cell damage prediction model, where a mechanical quantity was defined, able to describe the blood damage sustained by red cells under unsteady stress conditions, taking into account the load history.
Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulence Characteristics Downstream of Bileaflet Aortic Valve Prostheses

TL;DR: The smallest turbulence length scale, which offers a more reliable estimate of the effects of turbulence on blood cell damage, was three times the size of red blood cells and five times thesize of platelets, which suggests that there is more direct interaction with the blood cells, thus causing more damage.
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