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1.
Numerical analysis of flow phenomena and wall shear stresses in the human carotid artery bifurcation has been carried out using a three-dimensional geometrical model. The primary aim of this study is the detailed discussion of non-Newtonian flow velocity and wall shear stress during the pulse cycle. A comparison of non-Newtonian and Newtonian results is also presented. The applied non-Newtonian behavior of blood is based on measured dynamic viscosity. In the foreground of discussion are the flow characteristics in the carotid sinus. The investigation shows complex flow patterns especially in the carotid sinus where flow separation occurs at the outer wall throughout the systolic deceleration phase. The changing sign of the velocity near the outer sinus wall results in oscillating shear stress during the pulse cycle. At the outer wall of the sinus at maximum diameter level the shear stress ranges from -1.92 N/m2 to 1.22 N/m2 with a time-averaged value of 0.04 N/m2. At the inner wall of the sinus at maximum diameter level the shear stress range is from 1.16 N/m2 to 4.18 N/m2 with a mean of 1.97 N/m2. The comparison of non-Newtonian and Newtonian results indicates unchanged flow phenomena and rather minor differences in the basic flow characteristics.  相似文献   

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Aortic valve (AV) calcification is a highly prevalent disease with serious impact on mortality and morbidity. The exact cause and mechanism of the progression of AV calcification is unknown, although mechanical forces have been known to play a role. It is thus important to characterize the mechanical environment of the AV. In the current study, we establish a methodology of measuring shear stresses experienced by the aortic surface of the AV leaflets using an in vitro valve model and adapting the laser Doppler velocimetry (LDV) technique. The valve model was constructed from a fresh porcine aortic valve, which was trimmed and sutured onto a plastic stented ring, and inserted into an idealized three-lobed sinus acrylic chamber. Valve leaflet location was measured by obtaining the location of highest back-scattered LDV laser light intensity. The technique of performing LDV measurements near to biological surfaces as well as the leaflet locating technique was first validated in two phantom flow systems: (1) steady flow within a straight tube with AV leaflet adhered to the wall, and (2) steady flow within the actual valve model. Dynamic shear stresses were then obtained by applying the techniques on the valve model in a physiologic pulsatile flow loop. Results show that aortic surface shear stresses are low during early systole (<5 dyn/cm2) but elevated to its peak during mid to late systole at about 18-20 dyn/cm2. Low magnitude shear stress (<5 dyn/cm2) was observed during early diastole and dissipated to zero over the diastolic duration. Systolic shear stress was observed to elevate only with the formation of sinus vortex flow. The presented technique can also be used on other in vitro valve models such as congenitally geometrically malformed valves, or to investigate effects of hemodynamics on valve shear stress. Shear stress data can be used for further experiments investigating effects of fluid shear stress on valve biology, for conditioning tissue engineered AV, and to validate numerical simulations.  相似文献   

4.
The blood flow dynamics of a stenosed, subject-specific, carotid bifurcation were numerically simulated using the spectral element method. Pulsatile inlet conditions were based on in vivo color Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood velocity. The results demonstrated the transitional or weakly turbulent state of the blood flow, which featured rapid velocity and pressure fluctuations in the post-stenotic region of the internal carotid artery (ICA) during systole and laminar flow during diastole. High-frequency vortex shedding was greatest downstream of the stenosis during the deceleration phase of systole. Velocity fluctuations had a frequency within the audible range of 100-300Hz. Instantaneous wall shear stress (WSS) within the stenosis was relatively high during systole ( approximately 25-45Pa) compared to that in a healthy carotid. In addition, high spatial gradients of WSS were present due to flow separation on the inner wall. Oscillatory flow reversal and low pressure were observed distal to the stenosis in the ICA. This study predicts the complex flow field, the turbulence levels and the distribution of the biomechanical stresses present in vivo within a stenosed carotid artery.  相似文献   

5.
The presence of atherosclerotic plaques has been shown to be closely related to the vessel geometry. Studies on postmortem human arteries and on the experimental animal show positive correlation between the presence of plaque thickness and low shear stress, departure of unidirectional flow and regions of flow separation and recirculation. Numerical simulations of arterial blood flow and direct blood flow velocity measurements by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are two approaches for the assessment of arterial blood flow patterns. In order to verify that both approaches give equivalent results magnetic resonance velocity data measured in a compliant anatomical carotid bifurcation model were compared to the results of numerical simulations performed for a corresponding computational vessel model. Cross sectional axial velocity profiles were calculated and measured for the midsinus and endsinus internal carotid artery. At both locations a skewed velocity profile with slow velocities at the outer vessel wall, medium velocities at the side walls and high velocities at the flow divider (inner) wall were observed. Qualitative comparison of the axial velocity patterns revealed no significant differences between simulations and in vitro measurements. Even quantitative differences such as for axial peak flow velocities were less than 10%. Secondary flow patterns revealed some minor differences concerning the form of the vortices but maximum circumferential velocities were in the same range for both methods.  相似文献   

6.
The shear stress at the wall has been of interest as one of the possible fluid dynamic factors that may be damaging in the region of prosthetic valves. The purpose of this study was to measure the axial wall shear stresses in the region of a 29 mm tissue annulus diameter porcine stent mounted prosthetic aortic valve (Hancock, Model 242). Studies were performed in an in vitro pulse duplicating system. The axial wall shear stress was calculated from velocities obtained near the wall with a laser Doppler anemometer. The largest axial wall shear stress was 29 dyn cm-2 and it occurred at the highest stroke volume used (80 ml). At a stroke volume of 50 ml, the largest axial wall shear stress was 17 dyn cm-2 and at a stroke volume of 35 ml, it was 15 dyn cm-2. Stresses of these magnitudes are far below those reported to be damaging to the endothelial surface. These stresses may be high enough, however, to affect platelet function.  相似文献   

7.
The pulsatile flow in an anatomically realistic compliant human carotid bifurcation was simulated numerically. Pressure and mass flow waveforms in the carotid arteries were obtained from an individual subject using non-invasive techniques. The geometry of the computational model was reconstructed from magnetic resonance angiograms. Maps of time-average wall shear stress, contours of velocity in the flow field as well as wall movement and tensile stress on the arterial wall are all presented. Inconsistent with previous findings from idealised geometry models, flow in the carotid sinus is dominated by a strong helical flow accompanied by a single secondary vortex motion. This type of flow is induced primarily by the asymmetry and curvature of the in vivo geometry. Flow simulations have been carried out under the rigid wall assumption and for the compliant wall, respectively. Comparison of the results demonstrates the quantitative influence of the vessel wall motion. Generally there is a reduction in the magnitude of wall shear stress, with its degree depending on location and phase of the cardiac cycle. The region of slow or reversed flow was greater, in both spatial and temporal terms in the compliant model, but the global characteristics of the flow and stress patterns remain unchanged. The analysis of mechanical stresses on the vessel surface shows a complicated stress field. Stress concentration occurs at both the anterior and posterior aspects of the proximal internal bulb. These are also regions of low wall shear stress. The comparison of computed and measured wall movement generally shows good agreement.  相似文献   

8.
L.ymphocyte interactions with endothelial cells in microcirculation are an important regulatory step in the delivery of lymphocytes to peripheral sites of inflammation. In normal circumstances, the predicted wall shear stress in small venules range from 10 to 100 dyn/cm2. Attempts to measure the adhesion of lymphocytes under physiologic conditions have produced variable results, suggesting the importance of studying biologically relevant migratory lymphocytes. To quantify the effect of shear stress on these migratory lymphocytes, we used lymphocytes obtained from sheep efferent lymph ducts, defined as migratory cells, to perfuse sheep endothelial monolayers under conditions of flow. Quantitative cytomorphometry was used to distinguish cells in contact with the endothelial monolayers from cells in the flow stream. As expected, migratory cells in contact with the normal endothelial monolayer demonstrated flow velocities less than the velocity of cells in the adjacent flow stream. The flow velocities of these efferent lymphocytes were independent of cell size. To model the inflammatory microcirculation, lymphocytes were perfused over sequential endothelial monolayers to directly compare the velocity of cells in contact with cytokine-activated and unactivated control monolayers. The tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-1-activated endothelial monolayers marginally decreased cell velocities at 1.2 dyn/cm2 (3.6%), but significantly reduced cell velocities 0.3 dyn/cm2 (27.4%; P < 0.05). Similarly, the fraction of statically adherent lymphocytes decreased as shear stress increased to 1.2 dyn/cm2. These results suggest that typical wall shear stress in small venules. of the order of 20 dyn/cm2, are too high to permit adhesion and transmigration of migratory lymphocytes. Additional mechanisnis must be present in vivo to facilitate lymphocyte transmigration in the inflammatory microcircu-  相似文献   

9.
The steady flow of blood through three common types of prosthetic heart valves was simulated numerically using the finite element method. The velocity, pressure and stress fields were obtained for the disk-type, tilting-disk and ball-type prosthetic heart valves in aortic position, for increasing Reynolds numbers up to 900, 1500 and 2000 respectively. Computer graphics of calculated velocities are presented, showing in detail the accelerated flow, recirculation and stagnation areas developed in the prosthesis. Maximum wall shear stresses were found at 0.5, 1.4, and 1.2 diameters from the sewing ring downstream for the disk, tilting-disk and ball valves being the values of 55, 18 and 33 dyn cm-2 respectively. In the vicinity of the occluder, maximum shear stresses of 38, 30 and 47 dyn cm-2 respectively were computed. The flow characteristics and performance for each valve are compared, the results are presented in terms of energy loss and maximum shear stress. The velocity and stress fields are compared with in vitro evaluations found in the literature.  相似文献   

10.
Drug-resistant hypertensive patients may be treated by mechanical stimulation of stretch-sensitive baroreceptors located in the sinus of carotid arteries. To evaluate the efficacy of endovascular devices to stretch the carotid sinus such that the induced strain might trigger baroreceptors to increase action potential firing rate and thereby reduce systemic blood pressure, numerical simulations were conducted of devices deployed in subject-specific carotid models. Two models were chosen--a typical physiologic carotid and a diminutive atypical physiologic model representing a clinically worst case scenario--to evaluate the effects of device deployment in normal and extreme cases, respectively. Based on the anatomical dimensions of the carotids, two different device sizes were chosen out of five total device sizes available. A fluid structure interaction (FSI) simulation methodology with contact surface between the device and the arterial wall was implemented for resolving the stresses and strains induced by device deployment. Results indicate that device deployment in the carotid sinus of the physiologic model induces an increase of 2.5% and 7.5% in circumferential and longitudinal wall stretch, respectively, and a maximum of 54% increase in von Mises arterial stress at the sinus wall baroreceptor region. The second device, deployed in the diminutive carotid model, induces an increase of 6% in both circumferential and longitudinal stretch and a 50% maximum increase in von Mises stress at the sinus wall baroreceptor region. Device deployment has a minimal effect on blood-flow patterns, indicating that it does not adversely affect carotid bifurcation hemodynamics in the physiologic model. In the smaller carotid model, deployment of the device lowers wall shear stress at sinus by 16% while accelerating flow entering the external carotid artery branch. Our FSI simulations of carotid arteries with deployed device show that the device induces localized increase in wall stretch at the sinus, suggesting that this will activate baroreceptors and subsequently may control hypertension in drug-resistant hypertensive patients, with no consequential deleterious effects on the carotid sinus hemodynamics.  相似文献   

11.
Pulsatile flow was studied in physiologically realistic models of a normal and a moderately stenosed (30% diameter reduction) human carotid bifurcation. Time-resolved velocity measurements were made using magnetic resonance imaging, from which wall shear stress (WSS) vectors were calculated. Velocity measurements in the inflow and outflow regions were also used as boundary conditions for a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model. Experimental flow patterns and derived WSS vectors were compared qualitatively with the corresponding CFD predictions. In the stenosed phantom, flow in the bulb region of the "internal carotid artery" was concentrated along the outer wall, with a region of low and recirculating flow near the inner wall. In the normal phantom, the converse was found, with a low flow region near the outer wall of the bulb. Time-averaged WSS and oscillatory shear index were also markedly different for the two phantoms.  相似文献   

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14.
Arteries of several species, including man, tend to adjust their diameters such that the mean wall shear stress is in the range of 10-20 dynes cm-2. Additionally, intimal thickening in the human carotid bifurcation correlates well with the reciprocal of wall shear stress as determined in model studies. The correlation indicates that wherever the local mean wall shear stress exceeds approximately 10 dynes cm-2, the artery tends to be spared from intimal thickening. However, it is not known whether mean shear stress, i.e. the time-averaged value, or the instantaneous shear stress is the appropriate correlative variable. Each of these variables suggests different mechanisms for the reaction of the artery wall to its hemodynamic environment. It is therefore important to devise means by which the effects of mean shear and pulsatile shear can be separated in the study of atherogenesis. The present investigation examines the post-stenotic flow field in Plexiglas models under pulsatile conditions approximating those in the aortas of the cynomolgus monkey, an animal often employed in atherogenesis research. Behavior of the core flow and its effects on wall shear stress are studied for stenoses of 75 and 90% area reductions using laser velocimetry. The results show that the post-stenotic field contains regions in which the mean wall shear stress is low, but the pulsatile excursions are large.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Aortic valve (AV) calcification is a highly prevalent disease with serious impact on mortality and morbidity. Although exact causes and mechanisms of AV calcification are unclear, previous studies suggest that mechanical forces play a role. Since calcium deposits occur almost exclusively on the aortic surfaces of AV leaflets, it has been hypothesized that adverse patterns of fluid shear stress on the aortic surface of AV leaflets promote calcification. The current study characterizes AV leaflet aortic surface fluid shear stresses using Laser Doppler velocimetry and an in vitro pulsatile flow loop. The valve model used was a native porcine valve mounted on a suturing ring and preserved using 0.15% glutaraldehyde solution. This valve model was inserted in a mounting chamber with sinus geometries, which is made of clear acrylic to provide optical access for measurements. To understand the effects of hemodynamics on fluid shear stress, shear stress was measured across a range of conditions: varying stroke volumes at the same heart rate and varying heart rates at the same stroke volume. Systolic shear stress magnitude was found to be much higher than diastolic shear stress magnitude due to the stronger flow in the sinuses during systole, reaching up to 20 dyn/cm2 at mid-systole. Upon increasing stroke volume, fluid shear stresses increased due to stronger sinus fluid motion. Upon increasing heart rate, fluid shear stresses decreased due to reduced systolic duration that restricted the formation of strong sinus flow. Significant changes in the shear stress waveform were observed at 90 beats/min, most likely due to altered leaflet dynamics at this higher heart rate. Overall, this study represents the most well-resolved shear stress measurements to date across a range of conditions on the aortic side of the AV. The data presented can be used for further investigation to understand AV biological response to shear stresses.  相似文献   

16.
Flush-mounted hot film anemometer accuracy in pulsatile flow   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The accuracy of a flush-mounted hot film anemometer probe for wall shear stress measurements in physiological pulsatile flows was evaluated in fully developed pulsatile flow in a rigid straight tube. Measured wall shear stress waveform based on steady flow anemometer probe calibrations were compared to theoretical wall shear stress waveforms based on well-established theory and measured flow rate waveforms. The measured and theoretical waveforms were in close agreement during systole (average deviation of 14 percent at peak systole). As expected, agreement was poor during diastole because of flow reversal and diminished frequency response at low shear rate.  相似文献   

17.
A previous analysis (Basmadjian, J. Biomechanics 17, 287-298, 1984) of the embolizing forces acting on thrombi in steady Poiseuille flow has been extended to pulsatile blood flow conditions in the major blood vessels. We show that for incipient and small compact thrombi up to 0.1 mm height, the maximum embolizing stresses can be calculated from the corresponding 'quasi-steady' viscous drag forces and measured maximum wall shear. Their magnitude is from 5 to 30 times (tau w)Max, the maximum wall shear stress during the cardiac cycle in the absence of thrombi. For larger thrombi, inertial and 'history' effects have to be taken into account, leading to embolizing stresses in excess of 100 Pa (1000 dyn cm-2).  相似文献   

18.
Banerjee RK  Back LH  Back MR  Cho YI 《Biorheology》2003,40(4):451-476
To evaluate the local hemodynamics in flow limiting coronary lesions, computational hemodynamics was applied to a group of patients previously reported by Wilson et al. (1988) with representative pre-angioplasty stenosis geometry (minimal lesion size d(m)=0.95 mm; 68% mean diameter stenosis) and with measured values of coronary flow reserve (CFR) in the abnormal range (2.3+/-0.1). The computations were at mean flow rates (Q) of 50, 75 and 100 ml/min (the limit of our converged calculations). Computed mean pressure drops Deltap were approximately 9 mmHg for basal flow (50 ml/min), approximately 27 mmHg for elevated flow (100 ml/min) and increased to an extrapolated value of approximately 34 mmHg for hyperemic flow (115 ml/min), which led to a distal mean coronary pressure p(rh) of approximately 55 mmHg, a level known to cause ischemia in the subendocardium (Brown et al., 1984), and consistent with the occurrence of angina in the patients. Relatively high levels of wall shear stress were computed in the narrow throat region and ranged from about 600 to 1500 dyn/cm(2), with periodic (phase shifted) peak systolic values of about 3500 dyn/cm(2). In the distal vessel, the interaction between the separated shear layer wave, convected downstream by the core flow, and the wall shear layer flow, led to the formation of vortical flow cells along the distal vessel wall during the systolic phase where Reynolds numbers Re(e)(t) were higher. During the phasic vortical mode observed at both basal and elevated mean flow rates, wide variations in distal wall shear stress occurred, distal transmural pressures were depressed below throat levels, and pressure recovery was larger farther along the distal vessel. Along the constriction (convergent) and throat segments of the lesion the pulsatile flow field was principally quasi-steady before flow separation occurred. The flow regimes were complex in the narrow mean flow Reynolds number range Re(e)=100-230 and a frequency parameter of alphae=2.25. The shear layer flow disturbances diminished in strength due to viscous damping along the distal vessel at these relatively low values of Re(e), typical of flow through diseased epicardial coronary vessels. The distal hyperemic flow field was likely to be in an early stage of turbulent flow development during the peak systolic phase.  相似文献   

19.
A steady flow, in vitro model of distal arterial bypass graft junctions was used to examine the effects of junction angle and flow rate on the local velocity field. Three test sections were fabricated from Plexiglas tubing having anastomotic junction angles of either 30, 45, or 60 deg. Flow visualization revealed velocity profiles skewed toward the outer wall with a flow split around a clear stagnation point along the outer wall. Laser Doppler anemometry [LDA] measurements confirmed a distinct stagnation point at the outer wall and both reverse and forward shear were detected immediately upstream and downstream, respectively, of this site. Axial velocities and shear rates along the outer wall were higher than along the inner wall and occurred in the junction angle order: 45, 60, and 30 deg. This study clearly identified changes in wall shear which varied with the anastomotic angle and flow rate.  相似文献   

20.
Aortic valve (AV) calcification is a highly prevalent disease with serious impact on mortality and morbidity. The exact causes and mechanisms of AV calcification are unclear, although previous studies suggest that mechanical forces play a role. It has been clinically demonstrated that calcification preferentially occurs on the aortic surface of the AV. This is hypothesized to be due to differences in the mechanical environments on the two sides of the valve. It is thus necessary to characterize fluid shear forces acting on both sides of the leaflet to test this hypothesis. The current study is one of two studies characterizing dynamic shear stress on both sides of the AV leaflets. In the current study, shear stresses on the ventricular surface of the AV leaflets were measured experimentally on two prosthetic AV models with transparent leaflets in an in vitro pulsatile flow loop using two-component Laser Doppler Velocimetry (LDV). Experimental measurements were utilized to validate a theoretical model of AV ventricular surface shear stress based on the Womersley profile in a straight tube, with corrections for the opening angle of the valve leaflets. This theoretical model was applied to in vivo data based on MRI-derived volumetric flow rates and valve dimension obtained from the literature. Experimental results showed that ventricular surface shear stress was dominated by the streamwise component. The systolic shear stress waveform resembled a half-sinusoid during systole and peaks at 64–71 dyn/cm2, and reversed in direction at the end of systole for 15–25?ms, and reached a significant negative magnitude of 40–51 dyn/cm2. Shear stresses from the theoretical model applied to in vivo data showed that shear stresses peaked at 77–92 dyn/cm2 and reversed in direction for substantial period of time (108–110?ms) during late systole with peak negative shear stress of 35–38 dyn/cm2.  相似文献   

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