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A computational thrombus formation model: application to an idealized two-dimensional aneurysm treated with bare metal coils
Authors:John D. Horn  Duncan J. Maitland  Jonathan Hartman  Jason M. Ortega
Affiliation:1.Department of Biomedical Engineering,Texas A&M University,College Station,USA;2.Computational Engineering Division,Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,Livermore,USA;3.Department of Neurological Surgery,Kaiser Permanente Sacramento Medical Center,Sacramento,USA
Abstract:Cardiovascular implantable devices alter the biofluid dynamics and biochemistry of the blood in which they are placed. These perturbations can lead to thrombus formation which may or may not be desired, depending on the application. In this work, a computational model is developed that couples biofluid dynamics and biochemistry to predict the clotting response of blood to such devices. The model consists of 28 advection–diffusion–reaction partial differential equations to track proteins in the blood involved in clotting and utilizes boundary flux terms to model the initiation of the intrinsic clotting pathway at thrombogenic device surfaces. We use this model to simulate the transient clot growth within a 2D idealized bifurcation aneurysm filled with various distributions of bare metal coils with similar packing densities. The clot model predicts initial clot formation to occur in areas along coil surfaces where flow is minimal and where time-averaged shear rates are the smallest. Among the six coil-filled aneurysm cases simulated, maximum thrombus occlusion ranged between 80.8 and 92.2% of the post-treatment aneurysm volume and was achieved 325–450 s after treatment. With further refinement and validation, the computational clotting model will be a valuable engineering tool for evaluating and comparing the relative performance of cardiovascular implantable devices.
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