Velocity and pressure distributions in the aortic valve
暂无分享,去创建一个
The distribution of pressure in normal and stenosed aortic valves is investigated experimentally with a rigid-walled model placed in a pulsatile water-tunnel, and the experiments are complemented by a one-dimensional solution of the unsteady inviscid-flow equations. In the normal valve, convectively fed vortices are formed in the aortic sinuses; the vortices aid cusp positioning and the prevention of jet formation during valve closure. Aortic valve stenosis is shown to prevent the generation of vortices, causing the formation of a turbulent jet, with reduction of the pressure difference between the inlets (ostia) of the coronary arteries and the ventricle. This pressure difference is calculated for man resting and exercising, and for various degrees of stenosis.
[1] L. Talbot,et al. The fluid mechanics of the aortic valve , 1969, Journal of Fluid Mechanics.
[2] B. Bellhouse,et al. Mechanism of Closure of the Aortic Valve , 1968, Nature.
[3] D. E. Gregg. The George E. Brown Memorial Lecture: Physiology of the Coronary Circulation , 1963 .
[4] B. Bellhouse,et al. Fluid Mechanics of the Aortic Root with Application to Coronary Flow , 1968, Nature.