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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

In Vitro Validation of Finite Element Analysis of Blood Flow in Deformable Models

TLDR
The capabilities of numerical simulations incorporating deformable walls to capture both the vessel wall motion and wave propagation by accurately predicting the changes in the flow and pressure waveforms at various locations down the length of the deformable flow phantoms are demonstrated.
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to validate numerical simulations of flow and pressure incorporating deformable walls using in vitro flow phantoms under physiological flow and pressure conditions. We constructed two deformable flow phantoms mimicking a normal and a restricted thoracic aorta, and used a Windkessel model at the outlet boundary. We acquired flow and pressure data in the phantom while it operated under physiological conditions. Next, insilico numerical simulations were performed, and velocities, flows, and pressures in the in silico simulations were compared to those measured in the in vitro phantoms. The experimental measurements and simulated results of pressure and flow waveform shapes and magnitudes compared favorably at all of the different measurement locations in the two deformable phantoms. The average difference between measured and simulated flow and pressure was approximately 3.5 cc/s (13% of mean) and 1.5 mmHg (1.8% of mean), respectively. Velocity patterns also showed good qualitative agreement between experiment and simulation especially in regions with less complex flow patterns. We demonstrated the capabilities of numerical simulations incorporating deformable walls to capture both the vessel wall motion and wave propagation by accurately predicting the changes in the flow and pressure waveforms at various locations down the length of the deformable flow phantoms.

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Journal ArticleDOI

SimVascular: An Open Source Pipeline for Cardiovascular Simulation

TL;DR: The recent development of a fully open-source SimVascular software package, which provides a complete pipeline from medical image data segmentation to patient-specific blood flow simulation and analysis, is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A modular numerical method for implicit 0D/3D coupling in cardiovascular finite element simulations

TL;DR: The necessary formulation for coupling an arbitrary LPN to a finite element Navier-Stokes solver is presented, and implicit, semi-implicit, and explicit quasi-Newton formulations are compared.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the impact of modelling assumptions in multi-scale, subject-specific models of aortic haemodynamics.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that accurate subject-specific 1D/0D and 3D/ 0D models of aortic haemodynamics can be obtained using non-invasive clinical data while minimizing the number of arbitrary modelling decisions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Image-based modeling of hemodynamics in coronary artery aneurysms caused by Kawasaki disease.

TL;DR: In this novel quantitative study of hemodynamics in coronary aneurysms caused by Kawasaki Disease, markedly abnormal flow patterns that are associated with increased risk of thrombosis are documented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiscale Modeling of Cardiovascular Flows for Clinical Decision Support

TL;DR: This review discusses approaches to handling the coupled systems that arise from cardiovascular simulations, including recent algorithms that enable efficient large-scale simulations of the vascular system and discusses recent methods for solving the linear system of equations arising from these systems.
References
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Book

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TL;DR: Development of clinical techniques for relating hemodynamic and tensile properties to plaque location, stenosis, and composition should permit pathologists to provide new insights into the bases for the topographic and individual differences in plaque progression and outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

The arterial Windkessel

TL;DR: Characteristic impedance was introduced as a third element of the Windkessel model, a lumped model not suitable for the assessment of spatially distributed phenomena and aspects of wave travel, but it is a simple and fairly accurate approximation of ventricular afterload.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outflow boundary conditions for three-dimensional finite element modeling of blood flow and pressure in arteries

TL;DR: Outflow boundary conditions are derived for any downstream domain where an explicit relationship of pressure as a function of flow rate or velocities can be obtained at the coupling interface.
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