The main objective of this article is to determine the existing linear correlation between the real left ventricular volume (RV) from the heart of bovines and the volumes obtained by Teichholz's mathematical model and the volume of the truncated prolate spheroid (TPS) to identify which model has a higher proximity to the RV. For that, ten silicon rubber molds of the left ventricle (LV) were manufactured, and their real volumes were obtained through Archimedes' principle, and their linear dimensions were also obtained. These dimensions were used to feed Teichholz's and the TPS models. It was verified that, for ventricles of lower volume, the models showed relatively close results, and Teichholz's model was the most accurate one. The TPS method shows a grave accuracy mistake for higher volume ventricles. Besides, both methods showed strong linear correlations with the RV, and both with high significance.
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