4D modelling of fluid mechanics in the zebrafish embryonic heart

被引:11
|
作者
Foo, Yoke Yin [1 ]
Pant, Shilpa [1 ]
Tay, Huiping Shermaine [2 ]
Imangali, Nurgul [2 ]
Chen, Nanguang [1 ]
Winkler, Christoph [2 ]
Yap, Choon Hwai [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Univ Singapore, Dept Biomed Engn, Singapore, Singapore
[2] Natl Univ Singapore, Dept Biol Sci, Singapore, Singapore
关键词
Zebrafish embryonic heart; Wall shear stress; Computational fluid dynamics; Line-scan focal modulation microscopy; Embryonic heart biomechanics; Embryonic heart fluid mechanics; SHEAR-STRESS; PRESSURE; RECONSTRUCTION; HEMODYNAMICS; ULTRASOUND; EXPRESSION; PATTERNS; BEHAVIOR; BLOOD; FLOW;
D O I
10.1007/s10237-019-01205-6
中图分类号
Q6 [生物物理学];
学科分类号
071011 ;
摘要
Abnormal blood flow mechanics can result in pathological heart malformation, underlining the importance of understanding embryonic cardiac fluid mechanics. In the current study, we performed image-based computational fluid dynamics simulation of the zebrafish embryonic heart ventricles and characterized flow mechanics, organ dynamics, and energy dynamics in detail. 4D scans of 5 days post-fertilization embryonic hearts with GFP-labelled myocardium were acquired using line-scan focal modulation microscopy. This revealed that the zebrafish hearts exhibited a wave-like contractile/relaxation motion from the inlet to the outlet during both systole and diastole, which we showed to be an energy efficient configuration. No impedance pumping effects of pressure and velocity waves were observed. Due to its tube-like configuration, inflow velocities were higher near the inlet and smaller at the outlet and vice versa for outflow velocities. This resulted in an interesting spatial wall shear stress (WSS) pattern where WSS waveforms near the inlet and those near the outlet were out of phase. There was large spatial variability in WSS magnitudes. Peak WSS was in the range of 47.5-130 dyne/cm(2) at the inflow and outflow tracts, but were much smaller, in the range of 4-11 dyne/cm(2), in the mid-ventricular segment. Due to very low Reynolds number and the highly viscous environment, intraventricular pressure gradients were high, suggesting substantial energy losses of flow through the heart.
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 232
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Deep learning enhanced light sheet fluorescence microscopy for in vivo 4D imaging of zebrafish heart beating
    Meng Zhang
    Renjian Li
    Songnian Fu
    Sunil Kumar
    James Mcginty
    Yuwen Qin
    Lingling Chen
    Light: Science & Applications, 14 (1)
  • [22] Large massive 4d article with torsion and conformal mechanics
    Nersessian, A
    PHYSICS LETTERS B, 2000, 473 (1-2) : 94 - 101
  • [23] QUANTIFYING THE BIOMECHANICS OF THE EMBRYONIC ZEBRAFISH HEART
    Johnson, Brennan M.
    Garrity, Deborah M.
    Dasi, Lakshmi P.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASME SUMMER BIOENGINEERING CONFERENCE, PTS A AND B, 2012, : 597 - 598
  • [24] A Mechanotransduction Study In Embryonic Zebrafish Heart
    Yang, Jingchun
    Xu, Xiaolei
    CIRCULATION RESEARCH, 2013, 113 (04)
  • [25] Immunostaining of Dissected Zebrafish Embryonic Heart
    Yang, Jingchun
    Xu, Xiaolei
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2012, (59): : 1 - 3
  • [26] Structural and functional compartmentalization in cerebellar development: 4D imaging in zebrafish
    Tsuda, Sachiko
    MECHANISMS OF DEVELOPMENT, 2017, 145 : S129 - S129
  • [27] Analyzing Craniofacial Morphogenesis in Zebrafish Using 4D Confocal Microscopy
    McGurk, Patrick D.
    Ben Lovely, C.
    Eberhart, Johann K.
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2014, (83):
  • [28] 4D Light-sheet Imaging of Zebrafish Cardiac Contraction
    Zhang, Xinyuan
    Saberigarakani, Alireza
    Almasian, Milad
    Hassan, Sohail
    Nekkanti, Manasa
    Ding, Yichen
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2024, (203):
  • [29] Phosphodiesterase 4D and heart failure: a cautionary tale
    Lehnart, Stephan E.
    Marks, Andrew R.
    EXPERT OPINION ON THERAPEUTIC TARGETS, 2006, 10 (05) : 677 - 688
  • [30] 4D OCT helps to solve mystery of early embryonic heartbeat
    Farmer, Douglas
    Biophotonics International, 2020, 27 (06):