首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Insertion of a stent-graft into an aneurysm, especially abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs), is a very attractive surgical intervention; however, it is not without major postoperative complications, such as endoleaks. An endoleak is the transient accumulation of blood in the AAA cavity, which is formed by the stent-graft and AAA walls. Of the four blood pathways, a type I endoleak constitutes the major one. Thus, focusing on both proximal and distal type I endoleaks, i.e., the minute net influx of blood past the attachment points of a stent-graft into the AAA cavity, the transient three-dimensional interactions between luminal blood flow stent-graft wall, leakage flow, and AAA wall are computationally simulated. For different type I endoleak scenarios and inlet pressure wave forms, the impact of type I endoleaks on cavity pressure, wall stress, and stent-graft migration force is analyzed. The results indicate that both proximal type I-a and distal type I-b endoleaks may cause cavity pressures close to a patient's systemic pressure; however, with reduced pulsatility. As a result, the AAA-wall stress is elevated up to the level of a nonstented AAA and, hence, such endoleaks render the implant useless in protecting the AAA from possible rupture. Interestingly enough, the net downward force acting on the implant is significantly reduced; thus, in the presence of endoleaks, the risk of stent-graft migration may be mitigated.  相似文献   

2.
An aneurysm is a local artery ballooning greater than 50% of its nominal diameter with a risk of sudden rupture. Minimally invasive repair can be achieved by inserting surgically a stent-graft, called an endovascular graft (EVG), which is either straight tubular curved tubular or bifurcating. However post-procedural complications may arise because of elevated stagnant blood pressure in the cavity, i.e., the sac formed by the EVG and the weakened aneurysm wall In order to investigate the underlying mechanisms leading to elevated sac-pressures and hence to potentially dangerous wall stress levels and aneurysm rupture, a transient 3-D stented abdominal aortic aneurysm model and a coupled fluid-structure interaction solver were employed. Simulation results indicate that, even without the presence of endoleaks (blood flowing into the cavity), elevated sac pressure can occur due to complex fluid-structure interactions between the luminal blood flow, EVG wall, intra-sac stagnant blood, including an intra-luminal thrombus, and the aneurysm wall. Nevertheless, the impact of sac-blood volume changes due to leakage on the sac pressure and aneurysm wall stress was analyzed as well. While blood flow conditions, EVG and aneurysm geometries as well as wall mechanical properties play important roles in both sac pressure and wall stress generation, it is always the maximum wall stress that is one of the most critical parameters in aneurysm rupture prediction. All simulation results are in agreement with experimental data and clinical observations.  相似文献   

3.
Focusing on a representative abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) with a bifurcating stent-graft (SG), a fluid-structure interaction (FSI) solver with user-supplied programs has been employed to solve for blood flow, AAA/SG deformation, sac pressure and wall stresses, as well as the downward forces acting on the SG. Simulation results indicate that implanting a SG can significantly reduce sac pressure, mechanical stress, pulsatile wall motion, and maximum diameter change in AAAs; hence, it may restore normal blood flow and prevent AAA rupture effectively. The transient SG drag force is similar in trend as the cardiac pressure. Its magnitude depends on multi-factors including blood flow conditions, as well as SG and aneurysm geometries. Specifically, AAA neck angle, iliac bifurcation angle, neck aorta-to-iliac diameter ratio, SG size, and blood waveform play important roles in generating a fluid flow force potentially leading to SG migration. It was found that the drag force can exceed 5N for an AAA with a large neck or iliac angle, wide aortic neck and narrow iliac arteries, large SG size, and/or abnormal blood waveform. Thus, the fixation of self-expandable or balloon-expandable SG contact may be inadequate to withstand the forces of blood flowing through the implant and hence means of extra fixation should be considered. A comprehensive FSI analysis of the coupled SG-AAA dynamics provides physical insight for evaluating the luminal hemodynamics, and maximum AAA-stresses as well as biomechanical factors leading potentially to SG migration.  相似文献   

4.
This paper evaluates numerically coupled blood flow and wall structure interactions in a representative stented abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) model, leading potentially to endovascular graft (EVG) failure. A total of 12 biomechanical contributors to possible EVG migration were considered. The results show that after EVG insertion for the given model, the peak AAA sac-pressure was reduced to 14.2 mmHg (11.8% of plumen), and hence the maximum von Mises wall stress and wall deformation dropped by factors of 20 and 10, respectively. Thus, an EVG can significantly reduce sac pressure, mechanical stress, pulsatile wall motion, and the maximum diameter in AAAs and hence prevent AAA rupture effectively. In the absence of endoleaks, elevated sac-pressure can still be caused by fluid-structure interactions between the EVG, stagnant blood, and AAA wall. EVG migration forces vary from 1.4 to 7 N for different EVG geometries, material properties, and hemodynamic conditions. AAA-neck angle, iliac bifurcation angle, neck aorta-to-iliac diameter ratio, EVG size, aorto-uni-iliac EVG, and hypertension play important roles in generating forces potentially leading to EVG migration.  相似文献   

5.
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) rupture is the clinical manifestation of an induced force exceeding the resistance provided by the strength of the arterial wall. This force is most frequently assumed to be the product of a uniform luminal pressure acting along the diseased wall. However fluid dynamics is a known contributor to the pathogenesis of AAAs, and the dynamic interaction of blood flow and the arterial wall represents the in vivo environment at the macro-scale. The primary objective of this investigation is to assess the significance of assuming an arbitrary estimated peak fluid pressure inside the aneurysm sac for the evaluation of AAA wall mechanics, as compared with the non-uniform pressure resulting from a coupled fluid–structure interaction (FSI) analysis. In addition, a finite element approach is utilised to estimate the effects of asymmetry and wall thickness on the wall stress and fluid dynamics of ten idealised AAA models and one non-aneurysmal control. Five degrees of asymmetry with uniform and variable wall thickness are used. Each was modelled under a static pressure-deformation analysis, as well as a transient FSI. The results show that the inclusion of fluid flow yields a maximum AAA wall stress up to 20% higher compared to that obtained with a static wall stress analysis with an assumed peak luminal pressure of 117 mmHg. The variable wall models have a maximum wall stress nearly four times that of a uniform wall thickness, and also increasing with asymmetry in both instances. The inclusion of an axial stretch and external pressure to the computational domain decreases the wall stress by 17%.  相似文献   

6.
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) rupture is the clinical manifestation of an induced force exceeding the resistance provided by the strength of the arterial wall. This force is most frequently assumed to be the product of a uniform luminal pressure acting along the diseased wall. However fluid dynamics is a known contributor to the pathogenesis of AAAs, and the dynamic interaction of blood flow and the arterial wall represents the in vivo environment at the macro-scale. The primary objective of this investigation is to assess the significance of assuming an arbitrary estimated peak fluid pressure inside the aneurysm sac for the evaluation of AAA wall mechanics, as compared with the non-uniform pressure resulting from a coupled fluid-structure interaction (FSI) analysis. In addition, a finite element approach is utilised to estimate the effects of asymmetry and wall thickness on the wall stress and fluid dynamics of ten idealised AAA models and one non-aneurysmal control. Five degrees of asymmetry with uniform and variable wall thickness are used. Each was modelled under a static pressure-deformation analysis, as well as a transient FSI. The results show that the inclusion of fluid flow yields a maximum AAA wall stress up to 20% higher compared to that obtained with a static wall stress analysis with an assumed peak luminal pressure of 117 mmHg. The variable wall models have a maximum wall stress nearly four times that of a uniform wall thickness, and also increasing with asymmetry in both instances. The inclusion of an axial stretch and external pressure to the computational domain decreases the wall stress by 17%.  相似文献   

7.
Pulsatile flow in an axisymmetric rigid-walled model of an abdominal aorta aneurysm was analyzed numerically for various aneurysm dilations using physiologically realistic resting waveform at time-averaged Reynolds number of 300 and peak Reynolds number of 1607. Discretization of the governing equations was achieved using a finite element scheme based on the Galerkin method of weighted residuals. Comparisons with previously published work on the basis of special cases were performed and found to be in excellent agreement. Our findings indicate that the velocity fields are significantly affected by non-Newtonian properties in pathologically altered configurations. Non-Newtonian fluid shear stress is found to be greater than Newtonian fluid shear stress during peak systole. Further, the maximum shear stress is found to occur near the distal end of AAA during peak systole. The impact of non-Newtonian blood flow characteristics on pressure compared to Newtonian model is found insignificant under resting conditions. Viscous and inertial forces associated with blood flow are responsible for the changes in the wall that result in thrombus deposition and dilation while rupture of AAA is more likely determined by much larger mechanical stresses imposed by pulsatile pressure on the wall of AAA.  相似文献   

8.
Treatment options for abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) include highly invasive open surgical repair or minimally invasive endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR). Despite being minimally invasive, some patients are not suitable for EVAR due to hostile AAA morphology. Fenestrated-EVAR (F-EVAR) was introduced to address these limitations of standard EVAR, where AAA is treated using a Fenestrated Stent Graft (FSG). In order to assess durability of F-EVAR, displacement forces acting on FSGs were analysed in this study, based on patient-specific geometries reconstructed from computed tomography (CT) scans. The magnitude and direction of the resultant displacement forces acting on the FSG were numerically computed using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) with a rigid wall assumption. Although displacement force arises from blood pressure and friction due to blood flow, numerical simulations elucidated that net blood pressure is the dominant contributor to the overall displacement force; as a result, time dependence of the resultant displacement force followed pressure waveform very closely. The magnitude of peak displacement force varied from 1.9 N to 14.3 N with a median of 7.0 N. A strong positive correlation was found between inlet cross-sectional area (CSA), anterior/posterior (A/P) angle and the peak displacement force i.e. as inlet CSA or A/P angle increases, the magnitude of resultant displacement increases. This study manifests that while loads exerted by the pulsatile flow dictates the cyclic variation of the displacement force, its magnitude depends not only on blood pressure but also the FSG morphology, with the latter determining the direction of the displacement force.  相似文献   

9.
A mathematical approach of blood flow within an abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) with intraluminal thrombus (ILT) is presented. The macroscale formation of ILT is modeled as a growing porous medium with variable porosity and permeability according to values proposed in the literature. The model outlines the effect of a porous ILT on blood flow in AAAs. The numerical solution is obtained by employing a structured computational mesh of an idealized fusiform AAA geometry and applying the Galerkin weighted residual method in generalized curvilinear coordinates. Results on velocity and pressure fields of independent cases with and without ILT are presented and discussed. The vortices that develop within the aneurysmal cavity are studied and visualized as ILT becomes more condensed. From a mechanistic point of view, the reduction of bulge pressure, as ILT is thickening, supports the observation that ILT could protect the AAA from a possible rupture. The model also predicts a relocation of the maximum pressure region toward the zone proximal to the neck of the aneurysm. However, other mechanisms, such as the gradual wall weakening that usually accompany AAA and ILT formation, which are not included in this study, may offset this effect.  相似文献   

10.
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a localized dilatation of the aortic wall. The lack of an accurate AAA rupture risk index remains an important problem in the clinical management of the disease. To accurately estimate AAA rupture risk, detailed information on patient-specific wall stress distribution and aortic wall tissue yield stress is required. A complete fluid structure interaction (FSI) study is currently impractical and thus of limited clinical value. On the other hand, isolated static structural stress analysis based on a uniform wall loading is a widely used approach for AAA rupture risk estimation that, however, neglects the flow-induced wall stress variation. The aim of this study was to assess the merit of a decoupled fluid structure analysis of AAA wall stress. Anatomically correct, patient specific AAA wall models were created by 3D reconstruction of computed tomography images. Flow simulations were carried out with inflow and outflow boundary conditions obtained from patient extracted data. Static structural stress analysis was performed applying both a uniform pressure wall loading and a flow induced non-uniform pressure distribution obtained during early systolic deceleration. For the structural analysis, a hyperelastic arterial wall model and an elastic intraluminal thrombus model were assumed. The results of this study demonstrate that although the isolated static structural stress analysis approach captures the gross features of the stress distribution it underestimates the magnitude of the peak wall stress by as much as 12.5% compared to the proposed decoupled fluid structure approach. Furthermore, the decoupled approach provides potentially useful information on the nature of the aneurysmal sac flow.  相似文献   

11.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the potential correlation between peak wall stress (PWS) and abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) morphology and how it relates to aneurysm rupture potential. Using in-house segmentation and meshing software, six 3-dimensional (3D) AAA models from a single patient followed for 28 months were generated for finite element analysis. For the AAA wall, both isotropic and anisotropic materials were used, while an isotropic material was used for the intraluminal thrombus (ILT). These models were also used to calculate 36 geometric indices characteristic of the aneurysm morphology. Using least squares regression, seven significant geometric features (p?相似文献   

12.

Background  

Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a dilatation of the aortic wall, which can rupture, if left untreated. Previous work has shown that, maximum diameter is not a reliable determinant of AAA rupture. However, it is currently the most widely accepted indicator. Wall stress may be a better indicator and promising patient specific results from structural models using static pressure, have been published. Since flow and pressure inside AAA are non-uniform, the dynamic interaction between the pulsatile flow and wall may influence the predicted wall stress. The purpose of the present study was to compare static and dynamic wall stress analysis of patient specific AAAs.  相似文献   

13.
Rupture risk estimation of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) is currently based on the maximum diameter of the AAA. A more critical approach is based on AAA wall stress analysis. For that, in most cases, the AAA geometry is obtained from CT-data and treated as a stress free geometry. However, during CT imaging, the AAA is subjected to a time-averaged blood pressure and is therefore not stress free. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of neglecting these initial stresses (IS) on the patient-specific AAA wall stress as computed by finite element analysis. Additionally, the contribution of the nonlinear material behavior of the AAA wall is evaluated.Thirty patients with maximum AAA diameters below the current surgery criterion were scanned with contrast-enhanced CT and the AAA's were segmented from the image data. The mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) was measured immediately after the CT-scan and used to compute the IS corresponding with the CT geometry and MAP. Comparisons were made between wall stress obtained with and without IS and with linear and nonlinear material properties.On average, AAA wall stresses as computed with IS were higher than without IS. This was also the case for the stresses computed with the nonlinear material model compared to the linear material model. However, omitting initial stress and material nonlinearity in AAA wall stress computations leads to different effects in the resulting wall stress for each AAA. Therefore, provided that other assumptions made are not predominant, IS cannot be discarded and a nonlinear material model should be used in future patient-specific AAA wall stress analyses.  相似文献   

14.
Computational mechanics of Nitinol stent grafts   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A finite element analysis of tubular, diamond-shaped stent grafts under representative cyclic loading conditions for abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair is presented. Commercial software was employed to study the mechanical behavior and fatigue performance of different materials found in commercially available stent-graft systems. Specifically, the effects of crimping, deployment, and cyclic pressure loading on stent-graft fatigue life, radial force, and wall compliances were simulated and analyzed for two types of realistic but different Nitinol materials (NITI-1 and NITI-2) and grafts (expanded polytetrafluoroethylene-ePTFE and polyethylene therephthalate-PET). The results show that NITI-1 stent has a better crimping performance than NITI-2. Under representative cyclic pressure loading, both NITI-1 and NITI-2 sealing stents are located in the safe zone of the fatigue-life diagram; however, the fatigue resistance of an NITI-1 stent is better than that of an NITI-2 stent. It was found that the two types of sealing stents do not damage a healthy neck artery. In the aneurysm section, the NITI-1&ePTFE, NITI-1&PET, and NITI-2&PET combinations were free of fatigue fracture when subjected to conditions of radial stress between 50 and 150mmHg. In contrast, the safety factor for the NITI-2&ePFTE combination was only 0.67, which is not acceptable for proper AAA stent-graft design. In summary, a Nitinol stent with PET graft may greatly improve fatigue life, while its compliance is much lower than the NITI-ePTFE combination.  相似文献   

15.
Wang X  Li X 《Journal of biomechanics》2011,44(12):2177-2184
Endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) is considered as a promising alternative technique for the treatment of aortic aneurysm. However, complications often occur after EVAR. In this paper, the influence of the physiological factors on the biomechanical behaviors of stented and non-stented thoracic aortic aneurysm (TAA) were presented. Representative TAA models with different intraluminal thrombus (ILT) volume before and after stent-graft (SG) implantation were built. Fluid-structure interaction effect was taken into account. The relative sliding between the SG wall and the aortic wall was allowed. Results showed that the cardiac cycle and ILT volume should be given much more consideration than previously thought in future investigations on TAA compliance. The time-averaged longitudinal displacement of SG necks were not uniformly distributed along circumferential direction of the aortic wall. Drag force increased with the increase of the cardiac cycle and decreased with the decrease of ILT volume. Computational results of TAA wall stress, sac and lumen pressure indicated that patient with faster heart rate might be at great risk of aneurysm rupture. The stress absorption effect of the SG was influenced by both ILT and cardiac cycle, which was also found to have strong impact on flow pattern. We believe that this study will bring new insights into further researches on the relevant issues and provide mechanics-based implications for clinical management of EVAR for TAA patient.  相似文献   

16.
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a common disease among elderly individuals. However, the precise pathophysiology of AAA remains unknown. In AAA, an intraluminal thrombus prevents luminal perfusion of oxygen, allowing only the adventitial vaso vasorum (VV) to deliver oxygen and nutrients to the aortic wall. In this study, we examined changes in the adventitial VV wall in AAA to clarify the histopathological mechanisms underlying AAA. We found marked intimal hyperplasia of the adventitial VV in the AAA sac; further, immunohistological studies revealed proliferation of smooth muscle cells, which caused luminal stenosis of the VV. We also found decreased HemeB signals in the aortic wall of the sac as compared with those in the aortic wall of the neck region in AAA. The stenosis of adventitial VV in the AAA sac and the malperfusion of the aortic wall observed in the present study are new aspects of AAA pathology that are expected to enhance our understanding of this disease.  相似文献   

17.
Endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) can involve some unfavorable complications such as endoleaks or stent-graft (SG) migration. Such complications, resulting from the complex mechanical interaction of vascular tissue, SG and blood flow or incompatibility of SG design and vessel geometry, are difficult to predict. Computational vascular mechanics models can be a predictive tool for the selection, sizing and placement process of SGs depending on the patient-specific vessel geometry and hence reduce the risk of potential complications after EVAR. In this contribution, we present a new in silico EVAR methodology to predict the final state of the deployed SG after intervention and evaluate the mechanical state of vessel and SG, such as contact forces and wall stresses. A novel method to account for residual strains and stresses in SGs, resulting from the precompression of stents during the assembly process of SGs, is presented. We suggest a parameter continuation approach to model various different sizes of SGs within one in silico EVAR simulation which can be a valuable tool when investigating the issue of SG oversizing. The applicability and robustness of the proposed methods are demonstrated on the example of a synthetic abdominal aortic aneurysm geometry.  相似文献   

18.
19.
《Journal of biomechanics》2014,47(14):3524-3530
To investigate the hemodynamic performance of overlapping bare-metal stents intervention treatment to thoracic aortic aneurysms (TAA), three simplified TAA models, representing, no stent, with a single stent and 2 overlapped stents deployed in the aneurismal sac, were studied and compared in terms of flow velocity, wall shear stress (WSS) and pressure distributions by means of computational fluid dynamics. The results showed that overlapping stents intervention induced a flow field of slow velocity near the aneurismal wall. Single stent deployment in the sac reduced the jet-like flow formed prior to the proximal neck of the aneurysm, which impinged on the internal wall of the aneurysm. This jet-like flow vanished completely in the overlapping double stents case. Overlapping stents intervention led to an evident decrease in WSS; meanwhile, the pressure acting on the wall of the aneurysm was reduced slightly and presented more uniform distribution. The results therefore indicated that overlapping stents intervention may effectively isolate the thoracic aortic aneurysm, protecting it from rupture. In conclusion, overlapping bare-metal stents may serve a purpose similar to that of the multilayer aneurysm repair system (MARS) manufactured by Cardiatis SA (Isnes, Belgium).  相似文献   

20.
Biomechanical studies suggest that one determinant of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) rupture is related to the stress in the wall. In this regard, a reliable and accurate stress analysis of an in vivo AAA requires a suitable 3D constitutive model. To date, stress analysis conducted on AAA is mainly driven by isotropic tissue models. However, recent biaxial tensile tests performed on AAA tissue samples demonstrate the anisotropic nature of this tissue. The purpose of this work is to study the influence of geometry and material anisotropy on the magnitude and distribution of the peak wall stress in AAAs. Three-dimensional computer models of symmetric and asymmetric AAAs were generated in which the maximum diameter and length of the aneurysm were individually controlled. A five parameter exponential type structural strain-energy function was used to model the anisotropic behavior of the AAA tissue. The anisotropy is determined by the orientation of the collagen fibers (one parameter of the model). The results suggest that shorter aneurysms are more critical when asymmetries are present. They show a strong influence of the material anisotropy on the magnitude and distribution of the peak stress. Results confirm that the relative aneurysm length and the degree of aneurysmal asymmetry should be considered in a rupture risk decision criterion for AAAs.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号