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Clot Permeability,Agonist Transport,and Platelet Binding Kinetics in Arterial Thrombosis
Authors:Jian Du  Dongjune Kim  Ghadah Alhawael  David N Ku  Aaron L Fogelson
Institution:1.Department of Mathematics, Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, Florida;2.Department of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia;3.Departments of Mathematics and Biomedical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah
Abstract:The formation of wall-adherent platelet aggregates is a critical process in arterial thrombosis. A growing aggregate experiences frictional drag forces exerted on it by fluid moving over or through the aggregate. The magnitude of these forces is strongly influenced by the permeability of the developing aggregate; the permeability depends on the aggregate’s porosity. Aggregation is mediated by formation of ensembles of molecular bonds; each bond involves a plasma protein bridging the gap between specific receptors on the surfaces of two different platelets. The ability of the bonds existing at any time to sustain the drag forces on the aggregate determines whether it remains intact or sheds individual platelets or larger fragments (emboli). We investigate platelet aggregation in coronary-sized arteries using both computational simulations and in vitro experiments. The computational model tracks the formation and breaking of bonds between platelets and treats the thrombus as an evolving porous, viscoelastic material, which moves differently from the background fluid. This relative motion generates drag forces which the fluid and thrombus exert on one another. These forces are computed from a permeability-porosity relation parameterized from experimental measurements. Basing this relation on measurements from occlusive thrombi formed in our flow chamber experiments, along with other physiological parameter values, the model produced stable dense thrombi on a similar timescale to the experiments. When we parameterized the permeability-porosity relation using lower permeabilities reported by others, bond formation was insufficient to balance drag forces on an early thrombus and keep it intact. Under high shear flow, soluble agonist released by platelets was limited to the thrombus and a boundary layer downstream, thus restricting thrombus growth into the vessel lumen. Adding to the model binding and activation of unactivated platelets through von Willebrand-factor-mediated processes allowed greater growth and made agonist-induced activation more effective.
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