MarioHeart: Novel In-Vitro Flow Model for Testing Heart Valve Prostheses and Anticoagulant Therapies

Maxime Devos, Omayra C D Liesdek, Willem J L Suyker, Sjoerd van Tuijl, Roger E G Schutgens, Frans N van de Vosse, Linda M de Heer, Marcel C M Rutten

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Mechanical heart valve (MHV) prostheses present a risk of thromboembolic complications despite antithrombotic therapy. Further steps in the development of more hemocompatible MHVs and new anticoagulants are impeded due to the lack of adequate in-vitro models. With the development of a novel in-vitro model (MarioHeart), a pulsatile flow similar to the arterial circulation is emulated. The MarioHeart design owns unique features as 1) a single MHV within a torus with low surface/volume ratio, 2) a closed loop system, and 3) a dedicated external control system driving the oscillating rotational motion of the torus. For verification purposes, a blood analog fluid seeded with particles was used to assess fluid velocity and flow rate using a speckle tracking method on high-speed video recordings of the rotating model. The flow rate resembled the physiological flow rate in the aortic root, in both shape and amplitude. Additional in-vitro runs with porcine blood showed thrombi on the MHV associated with the suture ring, which is similar to the in-vivo situation. MarioHeart is a simple design which induces well-defined fluid dynamics resulting in physiologically nonturbulent flow without stasis of the blood. MarioHeart seems suitable for testing the thrombogenicity of MHVs and the potential of new anticoagulants.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e192-e198
JournalASAIO journal
Volume69
Issue number5
Early online date13 Mar 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2023

Keywords

  • anticoagulants
  • antithrombotic agents
  • biomedical engineering
  • heart valve prosthesis
  • heart valves
  • modeling
  • thrombosis

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