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Determination of fractional flow reserve (FFR) based on scaling laws: a simulation study

Jerry T Wong and Sabee Molloi

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Fractional flow reserve (FFR) provides an objective physiological evaluation of stenosis severity. A technique that can measure FFR using only angiographic images would be a valuable tool in the cardiac catheterization laboratory. To perform this, the diseased blood flow can be measured with a first pass distribution analysis and the theoretical normal blood flow can be estimated from the total coronary arterial volume based on scaling laws. A computer simulation of the coronary arterial network was used to gain a better understanding of how hemodynamic conditions and coronary artery disease can affect blood flow, arterial volume and FFR estimation. Changes in coronary arterial flow and volume due to coronary stenosis, aortic pressure and venous pressure were examined to evaluate the potential use of flow and volume for FFR determination. This study showed that FFR can be estimated using arterial volume and a scaling coefficient corrected for aortic pressure. However, variations in venous pressure were found to introduce some error in FFR estimation. A relative form of FFR was introduced and was found to cancel out the influence of pressure on coronary flow, arterial volume and FFR estimation. The use of coronary flow and arterial volume for FFR determination appears promising.


PACS

87.59.Dj Angiography

87.19.X- Diseases

87.19.U- Hemodynamics

87.19.Hh Cardiac dynamics

Subjects

Biological physics

Medical physics

Dates

Issue 14 (21 July 2008)

Received 8 April 2008, in final form 8 May 2008

Published 3 July 2008



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