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      Velocity and shear stress distribution downstream of mechanical heart valves in pulsatile flow.

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      The International journal of artificial organs

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          Abstract

          Ten mechanical valves (TAD 27 mm): Starr-Edwards Silastic Ball, Björk-Shiley Standard, Björk-Shiley Concave-Convex, Björk-Shiley Monostrut, Hall-Kaster (Medtronic-Hall), OmniCarbon, Bicer Val, Sorin, Saint-Jude Medical and Hemex (Duromedics) are investigated in a comparative in vitro study. The velocity and turbulent shear stress profiles of the valves were determined by Laser Doppler anemometry in two different downstream axes within a model aortic root. Depending on the individual valve design, velocity peaks up to 1.5 m/s and turbulent shear stress peaks up to 150 N/m2 were measured during the systolic phase. These shear stress peaks mainly occurred in areas of flow separation and intense momentum exchange. Directly downstream of the valves (measuring axis 0.55.dAorta) turbulent shear stress peaks occurred at peak systole and during the deceleration phase, while in the second measuring axis (1.5.dAorta) turbulence levels were lower. Shear stress levels were high at the borders of the fluid jets. The results are discussed from a fluid-dynamic point of view.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Int J Artif Organs
          The International journal of artificial organs
          0391-3988
          0391-3988
          Apr 1989
          : 12
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Helmholtz-Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Aachen, FRG.
          Article
          2722280
          10d8093a-92ff-4ce9-ae4d-cecf90894fe3
          History

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