In vitro evaluation of multi-objective physiological control of the centrifugal blood pump.

Left Ventricular Assist Devices (LVADs) have been used as a bridge to transplantation or as destination therapy to treat patients with heart failure (HF). The inability of control strategy to respond automatically to changes in hemodynamic conditions can impact the patients' quality of life. The developed control system/algorithm consists of a control system that harmoniously adjusts pump speed without additional sensors, considering the patient's clinical condition and his physical activity. The control system consists of three layers: 1st) Actuator speed control; 2nd) LVAD flow control (FwC); 3rd) Fuzzy control system (FzC), with the input variables: heart rate (HR), mean arterial pressure (MAP), minimum pump flow, level of physical activity (data from patient) and clinical condition (data from physician, INTERMACS profile). FzC output is the setpoint for the second LVAD control schemer (FwC) which in turn adjusts the speed. Pump flow, MAP and HR are estimated from actuator drive parameters (speed and power). Evaluation of control was performed using a centrifugal blood pump in a hybrid cardiovascular simulator, where the left heart function is mechanical model and right heart function is computational model. The control system was able to maintain MAP and cardiac output in the physiological level, even under variation of EF. Apart from this, also the rotational pump speed is adjusted following the simulated clinical condition. No backflow from the aorta in the ventricle occurred through LVAD during tests. The control algorithm results were considered satisfactory for simulations, but it still should be confirmed during in vivo tests.

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