王宇

个人信息Personal Information

教授

博士生导师

硕士生导师

性别:男

毕业院校:中佛罗里达大学

学位:博士

所在单位:医学部

学科:生物医学工程. 测试计量技术及仪器

办公地点:研教楼716-2

电子邮箱:yuwang0410@dlut.edu.cn

扫描关注

论文成果

当前位置: 中文主页 >> 科学研究 >> 论文成果

A sensorless physiologic control strategy for continuous flow cavopulmonary circulatory support devices

点击次数:

论文类型:期刊论文

发表时间:2021-01-10

发表刊物:BIOMEDICAL SIGNAL PROCESSING AND CONTROL

卷号:62

ISSN号:1746-8094

关键字:Cavopulmonary circulatory support devices; Fontan; Sensorless physiologic control

摘要:Objective: Mechanical circulatory support devices using continuous flow blood pump technologies are currently being developed to provide cavopulmonary support in patients with Fontan circulation. While cavopulmonary support can functionally replace the missing native right ventricle and biventricularize the Fontan circulation, there is a need for the pump to adapt to variable physiologic demands. A constant pump speed limits the ability to provide sufficient physiologic perfusion over a range of physiologic conditions. To address this challenge, a physiologic control algorithm for a Fontan pump was developed.
   Methods: The proposed algorithm uses a gain-scheduled, proportional-integral controller that generates a user defined cavopulmonary pressure head (CPPH = pulmonary artery pressure - vena caval pressure), to provide physiologic pressure rise while avoiding suction. The approach uses only intrinsic pump parameters and does not require the use of pressure or flow sensors. Performance and robustness of the sensorless control algorithm was quantified in-silico by simulating the following conditions: (1) Directly measured CPPH with pressure sensors; (2) CPPH estimation using the intrinsic pump measurement of pump speed and extended Kalman filter (EKF); (3) constant speed control algorithm; and (4) rapid four-fold increase in vena caval resistance (VCR) for (1) to (3).
   Results: The results demonstrated that the sensorless control algorithm maintained physiologic perfusion while simultaneously preventing vena caval suction without the need for pressure sensors.
   Conclusion and significance: The proposed algorithm was superior to the constant speed control strategy for physiologic perfusion and suction prevention, and warranted further investigation in vitro and in-vivo.