Wall shear stress and pressure patterns in aortic stenosis patients with and without aortic dilation captured by high-performance image-based computational fluid dynamics

被引:3
|
作者
Zolfaghari, Hadi [1 ]
Andiapen, Mervyn [2 ]
Baumbach, Andreas [2 ,3 ]
Mathur, Anthony [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Kerswell, Rich R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Appl Math & Theoret Phys, Cambridge, England
[2] Barts Hlth NHS Trust, Barts Heart Ctr, London, England
[3] Queen Mary Univ London, William Harvey Res Inst, Ctr Cardiovasc Med & Devices, London, England
[4] Queen Mary Univ London, NIHR Barts Biomed Res Ctr, London, England
关键词
4D FLOW MRI; BLOOD-FLOW; ASCENDING AORTA; HEMODYNAMICS; ASSOCIATION; SIMULATIONS; TRANSITION;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011479
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Spatial patterns of elevated wall shear stress and pressure due to blood flow past aortic stenosis (AS) are studied using GPU-accelerated patient-specific computational fluid dynamics. Three cases of moderate to severe AS, one with a dilated ascending aorta and two within the normal range (root diameter less than 4cm) are simulated for physiological waveforms obtained from echocardiography. The computational framework is built based on sharp-interface Immersed Boundary Method, where aortic geometries segmented from CT angiograms are integrated into a high-order incompressible Navier-Stokes solver. The key question addressed here is, given the presence of turbulence due to AS which increases wall shear stress (WSS) levels, why some AS patients undergo much less aortic dilation. Recent case studies of AS have linked the existence of an elevated WSS hotspot (due to impingement of AS on the aortic wall) to the dilation process. Herein we further investigate the WSS distribution for cases with and without dilation to understand the possible hemodynamics which may impact the dilation process. We show that the spatial distribution of elevated WSS is significantly more focused for the case with dilation than those without dilation. We further show that this focal area accommodates a persistent pocket of high pressure, which may have contributed to the dilation process through an increased wall-normal forcing. The cases without dilation, on the contrary, showed a rather oscillatory pressure behaviour, with no persistent pressure "buildup" effect. We further argue that a more proximal branching of the aortic arch could explain the lack of a focal area of elevated WSS and pressure, because it interferes with the impingement process due to fluid suction effects. These phenomena are further illustrated using an idealized aortic geometry. We finally show that a restored inflow eliminates the focal area of elevated WSS and pressure zone from the ascending aorta.
引用
收藏
页数:23
相关论文
共 32 条
  • [31] Hemodynamics in a three-dimensional printed aortic model: a comparison of four-dimensional phase-contrast magnetic resonance and image-based computational fluid dynamics
    Park, Jieun
    Kim, Junghun
    Hyun, Sinjae
    Lee, Jongmin
    MAGNETIC RESONANCE MATERIALS IN PHYSICS BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2022, 35 (05) : 719 - 732
  • [32] The influence of flow distribution strategy for the quantification of pressure- and wall shear stress-derived parameters in the coronary artery: A CTA-based computational fluid dynamics analysis
    Shi, Yibing
    Zheng, Jin
    Zhang, Ying
    Sun, Quanlin
    Shen, Jinhua
    Gao, Yongguang
    Sun, Jingxi
    Yang, Ning
    Zhou, Xuanxuan
    Li, Suqing
    Weir-McCall, Jonathan R.
    Xia, Ping
    Teng, Zhongzhao
    JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS, 2023, 161