Minimal haemodynamic system model including ventricular interaction and valve dynamics

Type of content
Journal Article
Publisher's DOI/URI
Thesis discipline
Degree name
Publisher
University of Canterbury. Civil Engineering.
University of Canterbury. Mechanical Engineering.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Language
Date
2004
Authors
Smith, B.W.
Chase, Geoff
Nokes, R.I.
Shaw, Geoff
Wake, G.C.
Abstract

Characterising circulatory dysfunction and choosing a suitable treatment is often difficult and time consuming, and can result in a deterioration in patient condition, or unsuitable therapy choices. A stable minimal model of the human cardiovascular system (CVS) is developed with the ultimate specific aim of assisting medical staff for rapid, on site modelling to assist in diagnosis and treatment. Models found in the literature simulate specific areas of the CVS with limited direct usefulness to medical staff. Others model the full CVS as a closed loop system, but models were found to be very complex, difficult to solve, or unstable. This paper develops a model that uses a minimal number of governing equations with the primary goal of accurately capturing trends in the CVS dynamics in a simple, easily solved, robust model. The model is shown to have long term stability and consistency with non-specific initial conditions as a result. An “open on pressure close on flow” valve law is created to capture the effects of inertia and the resulting dynamics of blood flow through the cardiac valves. An accurate, stable solution is performed using a method that varies the number of states in the model depending on the specific phase of the cardiac cycle, better matching the real physiological conditions. Examples of results include a 9% drop in cardiac output when increasing the thoracic pressure from -4mmHg to 0mmHg, and an increase in blood pressure from 120/80mmHg to 165/130mmHg when the systemic resistance is doubled. These results show that the model adequately provides appropriate magnitudes and trends that are in agreement with existing data for a variety of physiologically verified test cases simulating human CVS function

Description
doi:10.1016/j.medengphy.2003.10.001
Citation
Smith, B.W., Chase, J.G., Nokes, R., Shaw, G.M., Wake, G. (2004) Minimal Haemodynamic System Model Including Ventricular Interaction and Valve Dynamics. Medical Engineering and Physics, 26(2), pp. 131-139.
Keywords
Ngā upoko tukutuku/Māori subject headings
ANZSRC fields of research
Rights