In Vitro Study of an Intra-Aortic VAD: Effect of Reverse-Rotating Mode on Ventricular Recovery

Daniel Lee Timms, Holley Love, Po-Lin Hsu, Richard Mcmahon, Yaxin Wang1

  • 1Georgia Tech and Emory University

Details

09:15 - 09:30 | Wed 26 Aug | Suite 5 | WeAT12.4

Session: Therapeutic Intravascular Devices I

Abstract

Cardiac recovery has been observed in end-stage heart failure patients with mechanical circulatory support. An intra-aortic ventricular assist device (IntraVAD) is a novel rotary blood pump designed to operate in the ascending aorta behind the aortic valve, working in series with the compromised left ventricle (LV). Such a device requires optimal motion control in order to enhance the myocardial perfusion and thus promote cardiac recovery. Therefore, a reverse-rotating control (RRc) mode has been proposed to increase the mean arterial pressure (MAP) in diastole where the most coronary flow occurs. The RRc mode consists of two motions - forward rotating speed (FS) and reversely rotating speed (RS). The capability of cardiac recovery of three control modes, including ‘continuous’, ‘on/off ’ and ‘RRc’ modes, was evaluated in vitro. Stroke work (SW), ventricular volume, coronary perfusion pressure (CPP), and arterial pulsatility index (API) were used to evaluate LV unloading, myocardial perfusion and arterial pulsatility. The results show that, all three modes increased the LV stroke work (0.98W vs 1.00W vs 1.01W for continuous, on/off and RRc, respectively; baseline 0.9W) and decreased both end-diastolic volume (EDV) and end-systolic volume (ESV). The ‘RRc” mode improved CPP significantly (78.4mmHg compared to 66.4 mmHg and 70.9mmHg for continuous and on/off modes; baseline 71mmHg). The arterial pulsatility was higher in ‘RRc’ mode (0.84 compared to 0.43 and 0.59; baseline 0.48). In summary, the IntraVAD operating in the RRc mode can successfully unload the LV, enhance the myocardial perfusion, and restore the arterial pulsatility; therefore, it could be a promising therapeutic option to bridge heart failure patients to recovery.