• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Fast Approximate Quantification of Endovascular Stent Graft Displacement Forces in the Bovine Aortic Arch Variant
  • Contributor: Sturla, Francesco; Caimi, Alessandro; Romarowski, Rodrigo M.; Nano, Giovanni; Glauber, Mattia; Redaelli, Alberto; Votta, Emiliano; Marrocco-Trischitta, Massimiliano M.
  • Published: SAGE Publications, 2023
  • Published in: Journal of Endovascular Therapy, 30 (2023) 5, Seite 756-768
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1177/15266028221095403
  • ISSN: 1526-6028; 1545-1550
  • Keywords: Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ; Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ; Surgery
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Purpose: Displacement forces ( DFs) identify hostile landing zones for stent graft deployment in thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR). However, their use in TEVAR planning is hampered by the need for time-expensive computational fluid dynamics (CFD). We propose a novel fast-approximate computation of DFs merely exploiting aortic arch anatomy, as derived from the computed tomography (CT) and a measure of central aortic pressure. Materials and Methods: We tested the fast-approximate approach against CFD gold-standard in 34 subjects with the “bovine” aortic arch variant. For each dataset, a 3-dimensional (3D) model of the aortic arch lumen was reconstructed from computed tomography angiography and CFD then employed to compute DFs within the aortic proximal landing zones. To quantify fast-approximate DFs, the wall shear stress contribution to the DF was neglected and blood pressure space-distribution was averaged on the entire aortic wall to reliably approximate the patient-specific central blood pressure. Also, DF values were normalized on the corresponding proximal landing zone area to obtain the equivalent surface traction ( EST). Results: Fast-approximate approach consistently reflected (r2=0.99, p<0.0001) the DF pattern obtained by CFD, with a −1.1% and 0.7° bias in DFs magnitude and orientation, respectively. The normalized EST progressively increased (p<0.0001) from zone 0 to zone 3 regardless of the type of arch, with proximal landing zone 3 showing significantly greater forces than zone 2 (p<0.0001). Upon DF normalization to the corresponding aortic surface, fast-approximate EST was decoupled in blood pressure and a dimensionless shape vector (S) reflecting aortic arch morphology. S showed a zone-specific pattern of orientation and proved a valid biomechanical blueprint of DF impact on the thoracic aortic wall. Conclusion: Requiring only a few seconds and quantifying clinically relevant biomechanical parameters of proximal landing zones for arch TEVAR, our method suits the real preoperative decision-making process. It paves the way toward analyzing large population of patients and hence to define threshold values for a future patient-specific preoperative TEVAR planning.