Circulation, Vol 79, 1343-1353, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
EG Cape, EG Skoufis, AE Weyman, AP Yoganathan and RA Levine
The noninvasive Doppler assessment of regurgitant volume from jet size is
limited by the fundamental inequality of jet volume and regurgitant volume
and by the dependence of jet dimensions on driving pressure and instrument
settings for a given flow volume. Therefore, this study addresses the
hypothesis that an equation could be derived from basic physical principles
to quantify regurgitant volume with velocities that can be directly
measured by Doppler echocardiography. The principle of conservation of
momentum for free turbulent jets resembling many cardiac lesions yields an
equation for regurgitant volume as a function of maximum jet velocity, a
distal centerline velocity, and the intervening distance. This theory was
tested throughout a range of physiologic flow rates and pressures (orifice
velocities) in steady flow for 0.08-0.40 cm2 circular orifices and a
noncircular orifice and in physiologic pulsatile flow for 0.08 and 0.20 cm2
circular orifices. Plots of centerline velocities versus axial distance
coincided with those expected for such jets. Calculated and actual
volumetric flows agreed well by linear regression in the turbulent jet: for
steady flow rates, y = 0.98x + 0.09 (r = 0.99, SEE = 0.14 l/min), with
similar correlations for circular and noncircular orifices; for pulsatile
flow, y = 1.02x + 0.03 for peak flow rate (r = 0.98, SEE = 0.18 l/min) and
y = 1.02x + 0.58 for total regurgitant volume (r = 0.95, SEE = 0.81 ml).
There was no significant effect of orifice size or location of velocity
measurement within the turbulent jet. Therefore, for free jets resembling
many clinical lesions, regurgitant flow rate and volume can be calculated
noninvasively from Doppler velocities without planimetry of jet area.
Because the required information is intrinsic to the jet, this method
should apply regardless of associated valvular lesions. It should also
apply to orifices of variable shape because turbulent eddies obliterate the
details of flow at the orifice. The special case of jets impinging on walls
must be considered separately for both this technique and flow mapping.
ARTICLES
A new method for noninvasive quantification of valvular regurgitation based on conservation of momentum. In vitro validation
Cardiac Ultrasound Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114.
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