Title :
Mathematical model analysis of heart-arterial interaction in hypertension
Author :
Segers, Patrick ; Stergiopulos, Nikos ; Verdonck, Pascal ; Westerhof, Nico
Author_Institution :
Inst. Biomed. Technol., Ghent Univ., Belgium
Abstract :
We studied heart-arterial interaction in hypertension-induced left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) using a LV time-varying elastance model coupled to a 4-element lumped parameter model of the systemic arterial system. After assessing cardiac and arterial model parameters for normotensive control subjects, we applied arterial changes as observed in hypertensive patients with LVH (resistance +40%; compliance -25%) and assumed (i) no cardiac adaptation; (ii) LVH normalizes systolic wall stress (σs); (iii) LVH normalizes σs and venous filling pressure (Pv) increases such that end-diastolic wall stress (σd) is normalized as well. Human in vivo data show that in hypertensives with LVH, systolic and diastolic blood pressure increase by about 40% while cardiac output is constant and wall thickness increases by 30-55%. In both (i) and (ii), blood pressure increased by only 10% while cardiac output dropped by 20%. In (ii), LV wall thickness increased by only 10%. In contrast, the predictions of (iii) were in qualitative and quantitative agreement with in-vivo human data. We conclude that besides an increase in LV mass and wall thickness, normalizing σs, cardiac adaptations further consist of an increase in Pv, normalizing σd and preserving cardiac output in the presence of an impaired diastolic function.
Keywords :
cardiovascular system; diseases; haemodynamics; physiological models; 4-element lumped parameter model; LV mass; LV time-varying elastance model; cardiac adaptations; cardiac output; diastolic blood pressure; heart-arterial interaction; high blood pressure; hypertension; impaired diastolic function; in-vivo human data; mathematical model analysis; systemic arterial system; systolic blood pressure; venous filling pressure; wall thickness increases; Blood pressure; Filling; Humans; Hypertension; Immune system; In vivo; Mathematical model; Pressure control; Stress control; Time varying systems;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2001. Proceedings of the 23rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7211-5
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2001.1018885