体外血流评估:从PC-MRI到计算流体动力学,包括流固相互作用

Jonas Kratzke, F. Rengier, C. Weis, C. Beller, V. Heuveline
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引用次数: 1

摘要

心血管疾病的发生和发展可能与特定的生物力学参数高度相关。为了检查和评估生物力学参数,心血管动力学的数值模拟具有补充和增强医学测量和成像技术的潜力。因此,计算流体动力学(CFD)已被证明适用于在血管壁变形作用较小的情况下评估血流速度和压力。然而,还需要进一步的验证研究,并包括受大位移影响的形态的血管壁弹性。在这项工作中,我们考虑了一个流体-结构相互作用(FSI)模型,包括全弹性方程,以考虑主动脉壁软组织的可变形性。我们提出了一个数值框架,其中CFD研究可以对较小变形的主动脉段进行,FSI模拟可以对大位移区域(如主动脉根和弓)进行。这两种方法都通过主动脉幻像实验得到了验证。计算结果与二维相衬磁共振成像(PC-MRI)速度测量和基于导管的压力测量结果吻合良好。FSI模拟结果显示了由容器壁弹性引起的典型的容器柔度效应,这是CFD模型所不能做到的。体外验证的FSI模拟框架可以计算互补的生物力学参数,如血管壁内的应力分布。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
In vitro flow assessment: from PC-MRI to computational fluid dynamics including fluid-structure interaction
Initiation and development of cardiovascular diseases can be highly correlated to specific biomechanical parameters. To examine and assess biomechanical parameters, numerical simulation of cardiovascular dynamics has the potential to complement and enhance medical measurement and imaging techniques. As such, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) have shown to be suitable to evaluate blood velocity and pressure in scenarios, where vessel wall deformation plays a minor role. However, there is a need for further validation studies and the inclusion of vessel wall elasticity for morphologies being subject to large displacement. In this work, we consider a fluid-structure interaction (FSI) model including the full elasticity equation to take the deformability of aortic wall soft tissue into account. We present a numerical framework, in which either a CFD study can be performed for less deformable aortic segments or an FSI simulation for regions of large displacement such as the aortic root and arch. Both of the methods are validated by means of an aortic phantom experiment. The computational results are in good agreement with 2D phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging (PC-MRI) velocity measurements as well as catheter-based pressure measurements. The FSI simulation shows a characteristic vessel compliance effect on the flow field induced by the elasticity of the vessel wall, which the CFD model is not capable of. The in vitro validated FSI simulation framework can enable the computation of complementary biomechanical parameters such as the stress distribution within the vessel wall.
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