量化肌源性脑动脉网络血流动态的新计算模型。

ArXiv Pub Date : 2024-11-13
Alberto Coccarelli, Ioannis Polydoros, Alex Drysdale, Osama F Harraz, Chennakesava Kadapa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

面对压力波动,大脑自动调节通过限制血流变化发挥着关键的生理作用。虽然所涉及的细胞过程是由机械驱动的,但体内血流动力学力的量化仍然极其困难和不确定。在这项工作中,我们提出了一种新的计算框架,用于评估肌源性活跃脑动脉网络的血流动力学,这些脑动脉可以调节其肌肉张力,以稳定血流(和灌注压力)并限制血管壁内应力。引入的框架建立在收缩(肌源活性)血管壁力学和血流动力学模型之上,这些模型可以弱或强的方式进行数值耦合。我们研究了单个血管和网络层面的血管壁对压力变化响应的时间依赖性。在一个由大脑中动脉及其三代组成的理想化血管网络中,通过考虑不同类型的入口信号和数值设置,评估了模型的稳健性。对于所考虑的血管大小和边界条件,弱耦合确保了以较低的计算成本获得精确的结果。为了完成分析,我们评估了上游压力激增对血管网络血液动力学的影响。这为我们提供了一幅清晰的定量图景,展示了入口压力变化时压力和流量如何在每一代血管中重新分配。这项工作为未来旨在解读大脑自动调节的实验-计算联合研究铺平了道路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A new computational model for quantifying blood flow dynamics across myogenically-active cerebral arterial networks.

Cerebral autoregulation plays a key physiological role by limiting blood flow changes in the face of pressure fluctuations. Although the involved cellular processes are mechanically driven, the quantification of haemodynamic forces in in-vivo settings remains extremely difficult and uncertain. In this work, we propose a novel computational framework for evaluating the blood flow dynamics across networks of myogenically active cerebral arteries, which can modulate their muscular tone to stabilize flow (and perfusion pressure) as well as to limit vascular intramural stress. The introduced framework is built on contractile (myogenically active) vascular wall mechanics and blood flow dynamics models, which can be numerically coupled in either a weak or strong way. We investigate the time dependency of the vascular wall response to pressure changes at both single vessel and network levels. The robustness of the model was assessed by considering different types of inlet signals and numerical settings in an idealized vascular network formed by a middle cerebral artery and its three generations. For the vessel size and boundary conditions considered, weak coupling ensured accurate results with a lower computational cost. To complete the analysis, we evaluated the effect of an upstream pressure surge on the haemodynamics of the vascular network. This provided a clear quantitative picture of how pressure and flow are redistributed across each vessel generation upon inlet pressure changes. This work paves the way for future combined experimental-computational studies aiming to decipher cerebral autoregulation.

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