A Primer on Computational Simulation in Congenital Heart Disease for the Clinician
Irene Vignon Clementel (INRIA Rocquencourt), Alison L. Marsden (MAE),, Jeffrey A. Feinstein (School of Medicine)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the use of computational simulation in congenital heart disease, explaining the process, challenges, and current state of the art to improve collaboration between clinicians and engineers.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the steps, technical considerations, and current limitations in applying computational simulations to congenital heart disease clinical problems.
Findings
Medical image-based model building remains manual and complex.
Boundary condition assignment is critical and challenging.
Current software cannot produce models with a single click.
Abstract
Interest in the application of engineering methods to problems in congenital heart disease has gained increased popularity over the past decade. The use of computational simulation to examine common clinical problems including single ventricle physiology and the associated surgical approaches, the effects of pacemaker implantation on vascular occlusion, or delineation of the biomechanical effects of implanted medical devices is now routinely appearing in clinical journals within all pediatric cardiovascular subspecialties. In practice, such collaboration can only work if both communities understand each other's methods and their limitations. This paper is intended to facilitate this communication by presenting in the context of congenital heart disease (CHD) the main steps involved in performing computational simulation-from the selection of an appropriate clinical question/problem to…
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