TY - JOUR
T1 - Exercise studies in patients with rotary blood pumps: cause, effects, and implications for starling-like control of changes in pump flow
AU - Salamonsen, Robert Francis
AU - Pellegrino, Vincent
AU - Fraser, John
AU - Hayes, Kate
AU - Timms, Daniel
AU - Lovell, Nigel Hamilton
AU - Hayward, Christopher S
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - This multicenter study examines in detail the
spontaneous increase in pump flow at fixed speed that
occurs in exercise. Eight patients implanted with the VentrAssist
rotary blood pump were subjected to maximal and
submaximal cycle ergometry studies, the latter being completed
with patients supine and monitored with right heart
catheter and echocardiography. Maximal exercise studies
conducted in each patient at three different pump speeds
on separate days established initially the magnitude and
consistency of increases in pump flow that correlated well
with changes in heart rate. However, there was considerable
variation, coefficients of variation for mean heart rate
and pump flow being 47.9 and 49.3 , respectively. Secondly,
these studies indicated that increasing pump flows
caused significant improvements in maximal exercise
capacity. An increase of 2.1 L/min (35 ) in maximum
blood flow caused 12 W (16 ) further increase in achievable
work, 1.26 (9.3 ) mL/kg/min in maximal oxygen
uptake, and 2.3 (23 ) mL/kg/min in anaerobic threshold.
Mean increases in lactate were 0.85 mm (24 ), but mean
B-type natiuretic peptide fell by 126 mm, (-78 ). From
submaximal supine exercise studies, multiple linear regression
of pump flow on factors thought to underlie the spontaneous
increase in pump flow indicated that it was
associated with increases in heart rate (P = 0.039), pressure
gradient across the left ventricle (P = 0.032), and right atrial
pressure (P = 0.003). These changes have implications for
the recently reported Starling-like controller for pump flow
based on pump pulsatility values, which emulates the Starling
curve relating pump output to left ventricular preload.
Unmodified, the controller would not permit the full benefits
of this effect to be afforded to patients implanted with
rotary blood pumps. A modification to the pump control
algorithm is proposed to eliminate this problem.
AB - This multicenter study examines in detail the
spontaneous increase in pump flow at fixed speed that
occurs in exercise. Eight patients implanted with the VentrAssist
rotary blood pump were subjected to maximal and
submaximal cycle ergometry studies, the latter being completed
with patients supine and monitored with right heart
catheter and echocardiography. Maximal exercise studies
conducted in each patient at three different pump speeds
on separate days established initially the magnitude and
consistency of increases in pump flow that correlated well
with changes in heart rate. However, there was considerable
variation, coefficients of variation for mean heart rate
and pump flow being 47.9 and 49.3 , respectively. Secondly,
these studies indicated that increasing pump flows
caused significant improvements in maximal exercise
capacity. An increase of 2.1 L/min (35 ) in maximum
blood flow caused 12 W (16 ) further increase in achievable
work, 1.26 (9.3 ) mL/kg/min in maximal oxygen
uptake, and 2.3 (23 ) mL/kg/min in anaerobic threshold.
Mean increases in lactate were 0.85 mm (24 ), but mean
B-type natiuretic peptide fell by 126 mm, (-78 ). From
submaximal supine exercise studies, multiple linear regression
of pump flow on factors thought to underlie the spontaneous
increase in pump flow indicated that it was
associated with increases in heart rate (P = 0.039), pressure
gradient across the left ventricle (P = 0.032), and right atrial
pressure (P = 0.003). These changes have implications for
the recently reported Starling-like controller for pump flow
based on pump pulsatility values, which emulates the Starling
curve relating pump output to left ventricular preload.
Unmodified, the controller would not permit the full benefits
of this effect to be afforded to patients implanted with
rotary blood pumps. A modification to the pump control
algorithm is proposed to eliminate this problem.
UR - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/aor.12070/pdf
U2 - 10.1111/aor.12070
DO - 10.1111/aor.12070
M3 - Article
SN - 0160-564X
VL - 37
SP - 695
EP - 703
JO - Artificial Organs
JF - Artificial Organs
IS - 8
ER -