Dynamic vortical flow profile quantitatively characterizes mitral valvular-left ventricular hemodynamic coupling: In vivo analysis by dynamic 3D enstrophy mapping from 4D Flow MRI
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Vortical blood flow in the human left ventricular (LV) inflow initiates from the mitral valve (MV) and evolves within the LV during diastolic E-filling. Hence, vortical flow links MV and LV hemodynamics. This study sought to elucidate and quantitatively characterize the in vivo 3D dynamics of LV vortical flow over E-filling and relation to MV-LV hemodynamic coupling using 4D Flow MRI flow field. 34 healthy volunteers and 5 example patients underwent 4D Flow MRI. Vortical blood flow evolution was mapped in the LV over E-wave using enstrophy density. A new dimensionless profile PMV-LV was derived as a function of both MV vortex formation time (VFT) and LV volumetric enstrophy density. Results reveal that 3D vortical flow evolution in the healthy LV follows a bi-phasic behavior with a vortical growth phase followed by a vortical decay phase. In healthy LVs studied, the PMV-LV profile showed that the vortical growth and decay phases are characterized by a vortical growth time T_growth= 1.23+/-0.25, growth rate {\alpha}=0.80+/-0.17, decay time T_decay= 0.96+/-0.39 and decay rate \b{eta}=-1.02+/-0.49. Distinctly altered parameters were found in the pilot patients studied. The derived PMV-LV profile quantitatively characterizes MV-LV hemodynamic coupling by vortical flow dynamics. Results herein unravel new insights into cardiac physiology and could enable a novel standardized methodology to study MV-LV hemodynamic coupling and association to cardiac function in health and disease.
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