Fibrosis effect on left atrial hemodynamics using multi-physics, multi-scale simulations

ORAL

Abstract

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most frequent arrhythmia, with a prevalence of 0.5% of the world population. During AF, irregular electric impulses cause unsynchronized myocardial motion leading to blood stasis in the left atrial (LA) appendage (LAA), increasing thrombosis and stroke risk. Fibrosis is clinically associated with stroke but the underlying mechanisms are not understood. Fibrotic remodeling modifies myocardial structure impairing LA electrical propagation, myocardium mechanics, and function. To dissect these effects, we perform multi-physics, multi-scale simulations coupling electrophysiology, biomechanics, and hemodynamics. We simulate the LA contraction against a constant ventricular pressure using 4 different models with modified mechanical properties in the fibrotic tissue: no fibrosis effect, 5X increased tissue passive stiffness (iPS), 2X reduced cardiomyocyte peak tension (rPT), and combined effect (iPS+rPT). The results from 4 patient-specific LA anatomies with different fibrotic burdens suggest fibrosis reduces LA kinetic energy (KE) globally, especially in the iPS+rPT model. KE decreases linearly with emptying fraction (LA function impairment measure) in the LA body and in a patient-specific fashion in the LAA.

*NIH (1R01HL160024 and 1R01HL158667)

Presenters

  • Alejandro Gonzalo

    • University of Washington

Authors

  • Alejandro Gonzalo

    • University of Washington
  • Christoph M Augustin

    • University of Graz
  • Savannah Bifulco

    • University of Washington
  • Manuel Guerrero-Hurtado

    • University Carlos III of Madrid
  • Eduardo Duran

    • University of Malaga
  • Manuel García-Villalba

    • TU Wien
  • Pablo Martinez-Legazpi

    • Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia
    • UNED
  • Oscar Flores

    • Univ Carlos III de Madrid
  • Javier Bermejo

    • Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Maranon
  • Gernot Plank

    • University of Graz
  • Nazem Akoum

    • University of Washington School of Medicine
  • Patrick M Boyle

    • University of Washington
  • Juan Carlos del Alamo

    • University of Washington