OU Researcher Uses Geometry for Affairs of the Heart
NORMAN – Geometry is often referenced for matters of the
heart. Marriage has been described as “two parallel lines,” and others have
compared love to an “irrational equation” or as unending as “pi.” But
when it comes to the medical matters of the heart, geometry can be a lonely and
dangerous affair.
“The shape and size of a heart is not the same for every
person, and a diseased heart, such as ischemia heart failure, is different than
a healthy heart,” explains Dr. Chung-Hao Lee, an assistant professor in the Biomechanics
and Biomaterials Design Laboratory in the University of Oklahoma’s School of
Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering. “So, when it is necessary to do surgery on
the heart, it important to map out the individual’s particular geometry to know
how it will respond to different surgical treatment options.”
Lee’s recent research is focused on a predictive surgery for
a serious heart condition called Functional Tricuspid Regurgitation, which
affects approximately 1.6 million Americans. FTR is typically caused when the
left side of the heart fails, causing the right side to expand and a geometric
distortion of the heart. The distortion can lead to reverse blood flow, poor
functioning of the heart valves, or worse, heart failure on the right side.
Long-term surgical outcomes to repair FTR have a 20 percent
moderate to severe recurrence rate by 10 years after initial surgery. Also, up
to 40 percent of patients who have cardiac surgery require additional surgery
within five years due to the individual’s heart characteristics. This results
in more open-heart repeat surgeries and significant increases in risk and
mortality.
Lee and his team are developing a predictive modeling tool
for individual-optimized heart valve surgical repair. The customized analysis
will be a surgical planning tool for the treatment of that patient. Lee’s team
uses to a combination of clinical image data, such as functional magnetic
resonance imaging and clinical computed tomography, to reconstruct a 3D computational
model of the heart. Lee’s model would guide surgeons on the best approach to
repair FTR in a particular patient, reducing the risk of reoccurrence.
“Often, surgeons may have several options on how to repair a
heart,” Lee said. “They may try to manipulate the geometry of the heart or valves
or change the size of each individual apparatus. We can simulate those surgical
scenarios, one by one, to know the individual-optimized therapeutic option.”
The right approach can improve the durability of the repair.
“ We are now entering a level of knowledge and technical capability where computational modeling can deliver precision medicine,” Lee said. “If we can predict how a distinct heart will function under different surgical scenarios, we can help surgeon select the best approach to the surgery.”
The intersection of science, computational
science, clinical research and the heart make a healthy affair.[JC1]
[JC1]Not
a complete sentence.