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Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome

OBJECTIVES: Cardiac output (CO) response to dobutamine can identify Alagille's syndrome (ALGS) patients at higher risk of cardiovascular complications during liver transplantation. We propose a novel patient-specific computational methodology to estimate the coronary autoregulatory responses du...

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Autores principales: Silva Vieira, Miguel, Arthurs, Christopher J., Hussain, Tarique, Razavi, Reza, Figueroa, Carlos Alberto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6224049/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30408044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205829
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author Silva Vieira, Miguel
Arthurs, Christopher J.
Hussain, Tarique
Razavi, Reza
Figueroa, Carlos Alberto
author_facet Silva Vieira, Miguel
Arthurs, Christopher J.
Hussain, Tarique
Razavi, Reza
Figueroa, Carlos Alberto
author_sort Silva Vieira, Miguel
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Cardiac output (CO) response to dobutamine can identify Alagille's syndrome (ALGS) patients at higher risk of cardiovascular complications during liver transplantation. We propose a novel patient-specific computational methodology to estimate the coronary autoregulatory responses during different hemodynamic conditions, including those experienced in a post-reperfusion syndrome (PRS), to aid cardiac risk-assessment. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Data (pressure, flow, strain and ventricular volumes) from a 6-year-old ALGS patient undergoing catheter/dobutamine stress MRI (DSMRI) were used to parameterize a closed-loop coupled-multidomain (3D-0D) approach consisting of image-derived vascular models of pulmonary and systemic circulations and a series of 0D-lumped parameter networks (LPN) of the heart chambers and the distal arterial and venous circulations. A coronary microcirculation control model (CMCM) was designed to adjust the coronary resistance to match coronary blood flow (and thus oxygen delivery) with MVO2 requirements during Rest, Stress and a virtual PRS condition. RESULTS: In all three simulated conditions, diastolic dominated right coronary artery (RCA) flow was observed, due to high right ventricle (RV) afterload. Despite a measured 45% increase in CO, impaired coronary flow reserve (CFR) (~1.4) at Stress was estimated by the CMCM. During modeled PRS, a marked vasodilatory response was insufficient to match RV myocardial oxygen requirements. Such exhaustion of the RCA autoregulatory response was not anticipated by the DSMRI study. CONCLUSION: Impaired CFR undetected by DSMRI resulted in predicted myocardial ischemia in a computational model of PRS. This computational framework may identify ALGS patients at higher risk of complications during liver transplantation due to impaired coronary microvascular responses.
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spelling pubmed-62240492018-11-19 Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome Silva Vieira, Miguel Arthurs, Christopher J. Hussain, Tarique Razavi, Reza Figueroa, Carlos Alberto PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVES: Cardiac output (CO) response to dobutamine can identify Alagille's syndrome (ALGS) patients at higher risk of cardiovascular complications during liver transplantation. We propose a novel patient-specific computational methodology to estimate the coronary autoregulatory responses during different hemodynamic conditions, including those experienced in a post-reperfusion syndrome (PRS), to aid cardiac risk-assessment. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Data (pressure, flow, strain and ventricular volumes) from a 6-year-old ALGS patient undergoing catheter/dobutamine stress MRI (DSMRI) were used to parameterize a closed-loop coupled-multidomain (3D-0D) approach consisting of image-derived vascular models of pulmonary and systemic circulations and a series of 0D-lumped parameter networks (LPN) of the heart chambers and the distal arterial and venous circulations. A coronary microcirculation control model (CMCM) was designed to adjust the coronary resistance to match coronary blood flow (and thus oxygen delivery) with MVO2 requirements during Rest, Stress and a virtual PRS condition. RESULTS: In all three simulated conditions, diastolic dominated right coronary artery (RCA) flow was observed, due to high right ventricle (RV) afterload. Despite a measured 45% increase in CO, impaired coronary flow reserve (CFR) (~1.4) at Stress was estimated by the CMCM. During modeled PRS, a marked vasodilatory response was insufficient to match RV myocardial oxygen requirements. Such exhaustion of the RCA autoregulatory response was not anticipated by the DSMRI study. CONCLUSION: Impaired CFR undetected by DSMRI resulted in predicted myocardial ischemia in a computational model of PRS. This computational framework may identify ALGS patients at higher risk of complications during liver transplantation due to impaired coronary microvascular responses. Public Library of Science 2018-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6224049/ /pubmed/30408044 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205829 Text en © 2018 Silva Vieira et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Silva Vieira, Miguel
Arthurs, Christopher J.
Hussain, Tarique
Razavi, Reza
Figueroa, Carlos Alberto
Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome
title Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome
title_full Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome
title_fullStr Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome
title_short Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome
title_sort patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in alagille’s syndrome
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6224049/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30408044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205829
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