This is a report on the special regulation problem of the left blood pump after replacement of the natural heart by incorporated extracorporally driven blood pumps in an animal experiment. The consequence of the peripheral self-regulation on the transporting capacity of the bloodpumps considering the driving pressure and the systemic pressure losses has been investigated. Two possible controlling principles and the respective fields of application are discussed on the example of a lung oedema.
Presented are results of an analysis of more than 30000 data which were sampled in seven long-surviving calves after total artificial heart-replacement (more than 35 days survival). The continuity of 24 types of data (hemodynamic, labor- and physical data) are transformed for every animal in time-equidistant datafields and after this an average continuity for all seven animals is calculated and plotted. Twenty days after the operation the data have reached the preoperative values in nearly all cases, indicating a stable phase starting, according to the clinical condition of the animals.
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