Giovanni Maria Formato

@grupposandonato.it

3D and Computer Simulation Laboratory
IRCCS Policlinico San Donato

RESEARCH INTERESTS

CFD and FSI simulation in cardiovascular applications

7

Scopus Publications

22

Scholar Citations

2

Scholar h-index

1

Scholar i10-index

Scopus Publications

  • Morphological Changes of Anomalous Coronary Arteries from the Aorta during the Cardiac Cycle Assessed by IVUS in Resting Conditions
    Giovanni Maria Formato, Mauro Luca Agnifili, Luca Arzuffi, Antonio Rosato, Valentina Ceserani, Karina Geraldina Zuniga Olaya, Francesco Secchi, Miriam Deamici, Michele Conti, Ferdinando Auricchio,et al.

    Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
    BACKGROUND: Anomalous aortic origin of coronary artery (AAOCA) with intramural segment is associated with risk of sudden cardiac death, probably related to a compressive mechanism exerted by the aorta. However, the intramural compression occurrence and magnitude during the cardiac cycle remain unknown. We hypothesized that (1) in end diastole, the intramural segment is narrower, more elliptic, and has greater resistance than extramural segment; (2) the intramural segment experiences a further compression in systole; and (3) morphometry and its systolic changes vary within different lumen cross-sections of the intramural segment. METHODS: Phasic changes of lumen cross-sectional coronary area, roundness (minimum/maximum lumen diameter), and hemodynamic resistance (Poiseuille law for noncircular sections) were derived from intravascular ultrasound pullbacks at rest for the ostial, distal intramural, and extramural segments. Data were obtained for 35 AAOCA (n=23 with intramural tract) after retrospective image-based gating and manual lumen segmentation. Differences between systolic and end-diastolic phases in each section, between sections of the same coronary, and between AAOCA with and without intramural tract were assessed by nonparametric statistical tests. RESULTS: In end diastole, both the ostial and distal intramural sections were more elliptical ( P <0.001) than the reference extramural section and the correspondent sections in AAOCA without intramural segment. In systole, AAOCA with intramural segment showed a flattening at the ostium (−6.76% [10.82%]; P =0.024) and a flattening (−5.36% [16.56%]; P =0.011), a narrowing (−4.62% [11.38%]; P =0.020), and a resistance increase (15.61% [30.07%]; P =0.012) at the distal intramural section. No-intramural sections did not show morphological changes during the entire cardiac cycle. CONCLUSIONS: AAOCA with intramural segment has pathological segment-specific dynamic compression mainly in the systole under resting conditions. Studying AAOCA behavior with intravascular ultrasound during the cardiac cycle may help to evaluate and quantify the severity of the narrowing.

  • Case report: Personalized transcatheter approach to mid-aortic syndrome by in vitro simulation on a 3-dimensional printed model
    Luca Giugno, Giovanni Maria Formato, Massimo Chessa, Emiliano Votta, Mario Carminati, and Francesco Sturla

    Frontiers Media SA
    An 8-year-old girl, diagnosed with mid-aortic syndrome (MAS) at the age of 2 months and under antihypertensive therapy, presented with severe systemic hypertension (>200/120 mmHg). Computed tomography (CT) examination revealed aortic aneurysm between severe stenoses at pre- and infra-renal segments, and occlusion of principal splanchnic arteries with peripheral collateral revascularization. Based on CT imaging, preoperative three-dimensional (3D) anatomy was reconstructed to assess aortic dimensions and a dedicated in vitro planning platform was designed to investigate the feasibility of a stenting procedure under fluoroscopic guidance. The in vitro system was designed to incorporate a translucent flexible 3D-printed patient-specific model filled with saline. A covered 8-zig 45-mm-long Cheatham-Platinum (CP) stent and a bare 8-zig, 34-mm-long CP stent were implanted with partial overlap to treat the stenoses (global peak-to-peak pressure gradient > 60 mmHg), excluding the aneurysm and avoiding risk of renal arteries occlusion. Percutaneous procedure was successfully performed with no residual pressure gradient and exactly replicating the strategy tested in vitro. Also, as investigated on the 3D-printed model, additional angioplasty was feasible across the frames of the stent to improve bilateral renal flow. Postoperative systemic pressure significantly reduced (130/70 mmHg) as well as dosage of antihypertensive therapy. This is the first report demonstrating the use of a 3D-printed model to effectively plan percutaneous intervention in a complex pediatric MAS case: taking full advantage of the combined use of a patient-specific 3D model and a dedicated in vitro platform, feasibility of the stenting procedure was successfully tested during pre-procedural assessment. Hence, use of patient-specific 3D-printed models and in vitro dedicated platforms is encouraged to assist pre-procedural planning and personalize treatment, thus enhancing intervention success.

  • Development of novel computational tool to support surgical planning for the treatment of Anomalous Aortic Origin of the Coronary Arteries (AAOCA)


  • Lumped-parameter hemodynamic model as a non-invasive tool to assess coronary blood flow in AAOCA


  • Biomechanical assessment of the anomalous coronary compression by patient-specific finite element analysis


  • Overview of Computational Methods
    Giovanni Maria Formato, Silvia Schievano, and Giovanni Biglino

    Springer International Publishing

  • Aortic Expansion Induces Lumen Narrowing in Anomalous Coronary Arteries: A Parametric Structural Finite Element Analysis
    Giovanni Maria Formato, Mauro Lo Rito, Ferdinando Auricchio, Alessandro Frigiola, and Michele Conti

    ASME International
    Anomalous aortic origin of coronary arteries (AAOCA) is a congenital disease that can lead to cardiac ischemia during intense physical activity. Although AAOCA is responsible for sudden cardiac death (SCD) among young athletes and soldiers, the mechanisms underlying the coronary occlusion during physical effort still have to be clarified. The present study investigates the correlation between geometric features of the anomaly and coronary lumen narrowing under aortic root dilatations. Idealized parametric computer-aided designed (CAD) models of the aortic root with anomalous and normal coronaries are created and static finite element (FE) simulations of increasing aortic root expansions are carried out. Different coronary take-off angles and intramural penetrations are investigated to assess their role on coronary lumen narrowing. Results show that increasing aortic and coronary pressures lead to lumen expansion in normal coronaries, particularly in the proximal tract, while the expansion of the anomalous coronaries is impaired especially at the ostium. Concerning the geometric features of the anomaly, acute take-off angles cause elongated coronary ostia, with an eccentricity increasing with aortic expansion; the impact of the coronary intramural penetration on the lumen narrowing is limited. The present study provides a proof of concept of the biomechanical reasons underlying the lumen narrowing in AAOCA during aortic expansion, promoting the role of computational simulations as a tool to assess the mechanisms of this pathology.

RECENT SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS

  • How Computational Model May Help in Mechanism Understanding?
    GM Formato, V Ceserani, RM Romarowski, M Lo Rito, M Conti
    Congenital Anomalies of Coronary Arteries, 205-215 2023

  • M. Lo Rito, and M. Conti
    GM Formato, V Ceserani, RM Romarowski
    Congenital Anomalies of Coronary Arteries, 205 2023

  • Morphological changes of anomalous coronary arteries from the aorta during the cardiac cycle assessed by IVUS in resting conditions
    GM Formato, ML Agnifili, L Arzuffi, A Rosato, V Ceserani, ...
    Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions 16 (7), e012636 2023

  • Case report: Personalized transcatheter approach to mid-aortic syndrome by in vitro simulation on a 3-dimensional printed model
    L Giugno, GM Formato, M Chessa, E Votta, M Carminati, F Sturla
    Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine 9, 1076359 2023

  • Different Dynamic Luminal Compression of Intramural Segment During Cardiac Cycle in Anomalous Aortic Origin of Coronary Arteries Revealed by Ivus Gated Sequences
    GM Formato, ML Agnifili, L Arzuffi, A Rosato, V Ceserani, ...
    Circulation 146 (Suppl_1), A11835-A11835 2022

  • Overview of Computational Methods
    GM Formato, S Schievano, G Biglino
    Modelling Congenital Heart Disease: Engineering a Patient-specific Therapy, 1 2022

  • Carotid artery and stenting: from geometrical analysis to computational hemodynamics
    G Formato
    Universit degli studi di Pavia 2021

  • 283 Morphometric analysis of internal carotid arteries in hypertensives implementing a semi-automatic measurement platform for magnetic resonance imaging data
    G Formato, E Hart, M Hamilton, N Manghat, C Bucciarelli-Ducci, M Caputo, ...
    European Heart Journal-Cardiovascular Imaging 20 (Supplement_2), jez114. 001 2019

  • RF02 ANOMALOUS AORTIC CORONARY ARTERY ORIGIN: A PARAMETRIC STRUCTURAL FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS AND COMPUTATIONAL SIMULATION.
    ML Rito, GM Formato, F Auricchio, A Frigiola, A Giamberti, M Conti
    Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine 19, e74-e75 2018

  • Aortic expansion induces lumen narrowing in anomalous coronary arteries: a parametric structural finite element analysis
    GM Formato, M Lo Rito, F Auricchio, A Frigiola, M Conti
    Journal of Biomechanical Engineering 140 (11), 111008 2018

  • Occlusion in anomalous coronary arteries: a parametric structural finite element analysis
    GM Formato, F Auricchio, A Frigiola, M Conti
    2017

MOST CITED SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS

  • Aortic expansion induces lumen narrowing in anomalous coronary arteries: a parametric structural finite element analysis
    GM Formato, M Lo Rito, F Auricchio, A Frigiola, M Conti
    Journal of Biomechanical Engineering 140 (11), 111008 2018
    Citations: 19

  • Morphological changes of anomalous coronary arteries from the aorta during the cardiac cycle assessed by IVUS in resting conditions
    GM Formato, ML Agnifili, L Arzuffi, A Rosato, V Ceserani, ...
    Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions 16 (7), e012636 2023
    Citations: 2

  • Case report: Personalized transcatheter approach to mid-aortic syndrome by in vitro simulation on a 3-dimensional printed model
    L Giugno, GM Formato, M Chessa, E Votta, M Carminati, F Sturla
    Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine 9, 1076359 2023
    Citations: 1