Origin and appearance of HITS induced by prosthetic heart valves: an in vitro study

Int J Artif Organs. 2000 Jul;23(7):441-5.

Abstract

Patients with mechanical heart valve prostheses show significantly enhanced numbers of HITS detected by transcranial Doppler ultrasound. In order to assess the origin of HITS formation, an in vitro study was set out to quantify valve induced microemboli for mechanical and bioprosthetic valves under various circulatory conditions by means of Ultrasound-Doppler-Sonography. At the same time the influence of CO2 partial pressure on HITS rate vas investigated. It can be summarised that for mechanical heart valve prostheses a strong correlation exists between left ventricular dp/dtmax and the detected HITS rates. It was also demonstrated that a bioprosthesis generates significantly less HITS than a mechanical valve. The origin of HITS is gaseous since the tests were carried out using a cell-free filtered water-glycerol test fluid. The HITS rate could be increased by increasing the amount of dissolved gas within the test fluid. The results support the hypothesis that cavitation is the key factor in the appearance of gaseous microemboli at heart valve prostheses.

MeSH terms

  • Heart Valve Prosthesis*
  • Models, Cardiovascular*
  • Ultrasonography, Doppler, Transcranial*