Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Kadem L" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Hemodynamic performance and blood damage of the Intra-aortic pumps: A CFD-Based investigation Aycan O; Park Y; Kadem L; 41863715
ENCS
2 A high-fidelity simulator for evaluation of hemodynamic response during cardiopulmonary resuscitation in hypogravity environments Lord Z; Andrade C; Leroux L; Kadem L; 41741473
CHEMISTRY
3 Comprehensive review of reinforcement learning for medical ultrasound imaging Elmekki H; Islam S; Alagha A; Sami H; Spilkin A; Zakeri E; Zanuttini AM; Bentahar J; Kadem L; Xie WF; Pibarot P; Mizouni R; Otrok H; Singh S; Mourad A; 40567264
ENCS
4 Experimental Investigation of the Effect of a MitraClip on Left Ventricular Flow Dynamics Teimouri K; Darwish A; Saleh W; Ng HD; Kadem L; 40325266
ENCS
5 CACTUS: An open dataset and framework for automated Cardiac Assessment and Classification of Ultrasound images using deep transfer learning Elmekki H; Alagha A; Sami H; Spilkin A; Zanuttini AM; Zakeri E; Bentahar J; Kadem L; Xie WF; Pibarot P; Mizouni R; Otrok H; Singh S; Mourad A; 40107020
ENCS
6 Numerical investigation of the flow induced by a transcatheter intra-aortic entrainment pump Park Y; Aycan O; Kadem L; 40014031
ENCS
7 Design, manufacturing, and multi-modal imaging of stereolithography 3D printed flexible intracranial aneurysm phantoms Yalman A; Jafari A; Léger É; Mastroianni MA; Teimouri K; Savoji H; Collins DL; Kadem L; Xiao Y; 39546636
BIOLOGY
8 Design and validation of an In Vitro test bench for the investigation of cardiopulmonary resuscitation procedure El-Khoury A; Leroux L; Dupuis Desroches J; Di Labbio G; Kadem L; 39305857
ENCS
9 An Anatomically Shaped Mitral Valve for Hemodynamic Testing Darwish A; Papolla C; Rieu R; Kadem L; 38228812
ENCS
10 Spectral-Clustering of Lagrangian Trajectory Graphs: Application to Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms Darwish A; Norouzi S; Kadem L; 34845627
ENCS
11 On Left Ventricle Stroke Work Efficiency in Children with Moderate Aortic Valve Regurgitation or Moderate Aortic Valve Stenosis Asaadi M; Mawad W; Djebbari A; Keshavardz-Motamed Z; Dahdah N; Kadem L; 34357415
ENCS
12 Response to: "Color Doppler Splay: a New Tool for the Assessment of Valvular Regurgitations?" by Allievi et al Wiener PC; Friend EJ; Bhargav R; Radhakrishnan K; Kadem L; Pressman GS; 34062241
ENCS
13 Energy loss associated with in-vitro modeling of mitral annular calcification. Wiener PC, Darwish A, Friend E, Kadem L, Pressman GS 33591991
ENCS
14 Proper Orthogonal Decomposition Analysis of the Flow Downstream of a Dysfunctional Bileaflet Mechanical Aortic Valve. Darwish A, Di Labbio G, Saleh W, Kadem L 33469847
ENCS
15 Impact of Mitral Regurgitation on the Flow in a Model of a Left Ventricle. Papolla C, Darwish A, Kadem L, Rieu R 33000444
ENCS
16 Color Doppler Splay: A Clue to the Presence of Significant Mitral Regurgitation. Wiener PC, Friend EJ, Bhargav R, Radhakrishnan K, Kadem L, Pressman GS 32712051
ENCS
17 Effects of Hemodynamic Conditions and Valve Sizing on Leaflet Bending Stress in Self-Expanding Transcatheter Aortic Valve: An In-vitro Study. Stanová V, Zenses AS, Thollon L, Kadem L, Barragan P, Rieu R, Pibarot P 31995230
ENCS
18 Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Heart Rate On Flow in the Left Ventricle in Health and Disease -- Aortic Valve Regurgitation. Di Labbio G, Ben-Assa E, Kadem L 31701119
ENCS
19 Jet collisions and vortex reversal in the human left ventricle. Di Labbio G, Kadem L 30049450
ENCS
20 Response to letter to the editor: 'Left ventricular flow in the presence of aortic regurgitation'. Di Labbio G, Kadem L 30871721
ENCS
21 Experimental investigation of the flow downstream of a dysfunctional bileaflet mechanical aortic valve. Darwish A, Di Labbio G, Saleh W, Smadi O, Kadem L 31066923
ENCS

 

Title:Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Heart Rate On Flow in the Left Ventricle in Health and Disease -- Aortic Valve Regurgitation.
Authors:Di Labbio GBen-Assa EKadem L
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31701119?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1115/1.4045400
Publication:Journal of biomechanical engineering
Keywords:aortic regurgitationbradycardiaheart rateleft ventricletachycardia
PMID:31701119 Category:J Biomech Eng Date Added:2019-11-09
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Department of Mechanical, Industrial & Aerospace Engineering, Concordia University, 1455 Blvd. De Maisonneuve W., Montréal, QC H3G 1M8, Canada.
2 Cardiology Division, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel; Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139.

Description:

Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Heart Rate On Flow in the Left Ventricle in Health and Disease -- Aortic Valve Regurgitation.

J Biomech Eng. 2019 Nov 01;:

Authors: Di Labbio G, Ben-Assa E, Kadem L

Abstract

There is much debate in the literature surrounding the effects of heart rate on aortic regurgitation (AR). Despite the contradictory information, it is still widely believed that an increase in heart rate is beneficial due to the disproportionate shortening of the duration of diastole relative to systole, permitting less time for the left ventricle to fill from regurgitation. This in vitro work investigates how a change in heart rate affects the left ventricular fluid dynamics in the absence and presence of acute AR. Considering fluid dynamic factors, an increase in heart rate was observed to have a limited benefit in the case of mild AR and a detrimental effect for more severe AR. With increasing heart rate, mild AR was associated with a decrease in regurgitant volume, a negligible change in regurgitant volume per diastolic second and a limited reduction in the fraction of retained regurgitant inflow. More severe AR was accompanied by an increase in both regurgitant volume and the fraction of retained regurgitant inflow, implying a less effective pumping efficiency and a longer relative residence time of blood in the ventricle. Globally, the left ventricle's capacity to compensate for the increase in energy dissipation associated with an increase in heart rate diminishes considerably with severity, a phenomenon which may be exploited further as a method of noninvasive assessment of the severity of AR. These findings may affect the clinical belief that tachycardia is preferred in acute AR and should be investigated further in the clinical setting.

PMID: 31701119 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]





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