Publication | Closed Access
Noninvasive Measurement of Time-Varying Three-Dimensional Relative Pressure Fields Within the Human Heart
121
Citations
33
References
2002
Year
HypertensionHeart FailureEngineeringMeasurementFluid MechanicsHuman HeartBiomedical EngineeringDiastolic FunctionBlood FlowPressure Poisson EquationElectrophysiological EvaluationCardiac PressureCardiologyBlood Flow MeasurementCardiac MechanicRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingMultiphase FlowBiomedical FlowFlow PhenomenaPhysiologyNoninvasive MeasurementElectrophysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicine
Understanding cardiac blood flow patterns is important in the assessment of cardiovascular function. Three-dimensional flow and relative pressure fields within the human left ventricle are demonstrated by combining velocity measurements with computational fluid mechanics methods. The velocity field throughout the left atrium and ventricle of a normal human heart is measured using time-resolved three-dimensional phase-contrast MRI. Subsequently, the time-resolved three-dimensional relative pressure is calculated from this velocity field using the pressure Poisson equation. Noninvasive simultaneous assessment of cardiac pressure and flow phenomena is an important new tool for studying cardiac fluid dynamics.
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