{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: A study on the correlation between lung injury severity and cardiac function through a closed-loop model. {Author}: Bai T;Zhao Y;Jiang W;Liang L; {Journal}: Comput Methods Programs Biomed {Volume}: 253 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Aug 27 {Factor}: 7.027 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2024.108256 {Abstract}: OBJECTIVE: Numerous clinical and pathological studies have confirmed that lung injury can cause cardiovascular disease, but there is no explanation for the mechanism by which the degree of lung injury affects cardiac function. We attempt to reveal this mechanism of influence by simulating a cyclic model.
METHODS: This study established a closed-loop cardiovascular model with a series of electrical parameters. Including the heart, lungs, arteries, veins, etc., each part of the cardiovascular system is modeled using centralized parameters. Adjusting these lung resistances to alter the degree of lung injury is aimed at reflecting the impact of different degrees of lung injury on cardiac function. Finally, analyze and compare the changes in blood pressure, aortic flow, atrioventricular volume, and atrioventricular pressure among different lung injuries to obtain the changes in cardiac function.
RESULTS: In this model, the peak aortic flow decreased, the earlier the trough appeared, and the total aortic flow decreased. Left atrial blood pressure decreased from 6.5 mmHg to around 5.5 mmHg, left ventricular blood pressure decreased from 100 mmHg to around 50 mmHg, and aortic blood pressure also decreased from 100 mmHg to around 50 mmHg. The blood pressure in the pulmonary artery, right atrium, and right ventricle increases. The right ventricular blood pressure decreased from 20 mmHg to around 40 mmHg, while the right atrial blood pressure slightly increased. It can be seen that the increase in impedance has a greater impact on ventricular blood pressure than on atrium. Pulmonary arterial pressure significantly increases, rising from 20 mmHg to around 50 mmHg, forming pulmonary hypertension. The left ventricular end-systolic potential energy, filling energy, stroke work, stroke output, left ventricular filling period, maximum blood pressure during ventricular ejection period, and stroke energy efficiency decrease.
CONCLUSIONS: We established a closed-loop cardiovascular model that reveals that the more severe lung injury, the higher blood pressure in the pulmonary artery, right atrium, and right ventricle, while the lower blood pressure in the left atrium, left ventricle, and aorta. The increase in pulmonary impedance leads to abnormalities in myocardial contraction, diastolic function, and cardiac reserve capacity, leading to a decrease in cardiac function. This closed-loop model provides a method for pre assessment of cardiovascular disease after lung injury.