DOI | Trouver le DOI : https://doi.org/10.1117/12.911352 |
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Auteur | Rechercher : McLeod, A.J.; Rechercher : Moore, J.; Rechercher : Lang, P.; Rechercher : Bainbridge, D.; Rechercher : Campbell, G.1; Rechercher : Jones, D.L.; Rechercher : Guiraudon, G.M.; Rechercher : Peters, T.M. |
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Affiliation | - Conseil national de recherches du Canada. Institut des matériaux industriels du CNRC
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Format | Texte, Article |
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Conférence | SPIE Medical Imaging, February 5-7, 2012, San Diego, CA, USA |
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Sujet | anchoring technique; animal studies; beating heart; cardiac surgery; consistent testing; Doppler ultrasound; gold standards; image guidance systems; image guided surgery; left atriums; median sternotomy; minimally invasive; mitral annulus; mitral valves; surgical instrument; surgical phantom; cardiovascular surgery; medical imaging; prosthetics; robotics; surgical equipment; pumps |
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Résumé | Conventional mitral valve replacement requires a median sternotomy and cardio-pulmonary bypass with aortic crossclamping and is associated with significant mortality and morbidity which could be reduced by performing the procedure off-pump. Replacing the mitral valve in the closed, off-pump, beating heart requires extensive development and validation of surgical and imaging techniques. Image guidance systems and surgical access for off-pump mitral valve replacement have been previously developed, allowing the prosthetic valve to be safely introduced into the left atrium and inserted into the mitral annulus. The major remaining challenge is to design a method of securely anchoring the prosthetic valve inside the beating heart. The development of anchoring techniques has been hampered by the expense and difficulty in conducting large animal studies. In this paper, we demonstrate how prosthetic valve anchoring may be evaluated in a dynamic phantom. The phantom provides a consistent testing environment where pressure measurements and Doppler ultrasound can be used to monitor and assess the valve anchoring procedures, detecting pararvalvular leak when valve anchoring is inadequate. Minimally invasive anchoring techniques may be directly compared to the current gold standard of valves sutured under direct vision, providing a useful tool for the validation of new surgical instruments. © 2012 Copyright Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). |
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Date de publication | 2012 |
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Maison d’édition | SPIE |
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Dans | |
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Série | |
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Langue | anglais |
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Publications évaluées par des pairs | Oui |
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Numéro NPARC | 21269224 |
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Exporter la notice | Exporter en format RIS |
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Signaler une correction | Signaler une correction (s'ouvre dans un nouvel onglet) |
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Identificateur de l’enregistrement | 8310e3ea-54cd-42b1-94f3-0e6576d69835 |
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Enregistrement créé | 2013-12-12 |
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Enregistrement modifié | 2020-04-21 |
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