Worth Longest P, Kleinstreuer Clement
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, North Carolina State University, Campus Box 7910 3211, Broughton Hall, Raleigh, NC 27695-7910, USA.
J Biomech. 2003 Mar;36(3):421-30. doi: 10.1016/s0021-9290(02)00434-7.
Adhesions of monocytes and platelets to a vascular surface, particularly in regions of flow stagnation, recirculation, and reattachment, are a significant initial event in a broad spectrum of particle-wall interactions that significantly influence the formation of stenotic lesions and mural thrombi. A number of approximations are available for the simulation of both monocyte and platelet interactions with the vascular surface. For the simulation of blood particle adhesion, this study hypothesizes that: (a) the discrete element approach, which accounts for finite particle size and inertia, is advantageous in the context of non-parallel flow domains including stagnation, recirculation, and reattachment; and (b) the likelihood for particle deposition may be effectively approximated as being non-linearly proportional to local particle concentration, residence time, and wall proximity. Models such as wall shear stress correlations, the multicomponent mixture approach, and Lagrangian particle tracking with and without hydrodynamic particle-wall interactions were evaluated. Quantitative performance of the selected models was established by comparisons to available experimental data sets for non-parallel axisymmetric suspension flows of monocytes and platelets. Factors including the convective-diffusive transport of particles, finite particle size and inertia, as well as near-wall hydrodynamic interactions were found to significantly influence blood particle deposition. Of the models studied, the near-wall residence time approach was found to be a particularly effective indicator for the deposition of monocytes (r2=0.74) and platelets (r2=0.57), given that nano-scale physical and biochemical effects must be greatly approximated in computational simulations involving relatively large-scale geometries and complex flow fields.
单核细胞和血小板与血管表面的黏附,特别是在血流停滞、再循环和再附着区域,是广泛的颗粒 - 壁相互作用中的一个重要初始事件,对狭窄病变和壁血栓的形成有重大影响。有多种近似方法可用于模拟单核细胞和血小板与血管表面的相互作用。对于血液颗粒黏附的模拟,本研究假设:(a) 考虑有限颗粒尺寸和惯性的离散元方法,在包括停滞、再循环和再附着的非平行流动域中具有优势;(b) 颗粒沉积的可能性可有效近似为与局部颗粒浓度、停留时间和壁面接近程度呈非线性比例关系。对诸如壁面剪应力相关性模型、多组分混合方法以及有无流体动力学颗粒 - 壁面相互作用的拉格朗日颗粒追踪等模型进行了评估。通过与单核细胞和血小板非平行轴对称悬浮流的现有实验数据集进行比较,确定了所选模型的定量性能。发现包括颗粒的对流 - 扩散传输、有限颗粒尺寸和惯性以及近壁流体动力学相互作用等因素对血液颗粒沉积有显著影响。在所研究的模型中,鉴于在涉及相对大规模几何形状和复杂流场的计算模拟中必须对纳米级物理和生化效应进行大量近似,近壁停留时间方法被发现是单核细胞(r2 = 0.74)和血小板(r2 = 0.57)沉积的特别有效指标。