Department of Biomedical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.
J Vasc Surg. 2010 Jan;51(1):19-26. doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2009.08.075. Epub 2009 Nov 27.
In the decision for surgical repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs), the maximum diameter is the main factor. Several studies have concluded that the diameter may not be reliable as rupture risk criterion for the individual patient and wall stress was found to have a higher sensitivity and specificity. The AAA wall stress may also be an influential factor in growth of the AAA. This study investigates the effect of intraluminal thrombus on the wall stress and growth rate of aneurysms, using both idealized and patient-specific AAA models in wall stress computations.
Idealized AAA models were created for wall stress analysis. Thrombus was modeled as an incompressible linear elastic material and was fixed to the wall. The reduction in wall stress for a range of thrombus volumes and shear moduli was computed. For 30 patient-specific AAA models with varying thrombus volumes, the wall stress was computed with and without thrombus. The diameter growth rate was compared for AAAs with a small and large thrombus volume. The results were compared between the idealized and patient-specific models.
The thrombus caused a reduction in wall stress, which was stronger for larger thrombi and higher elastic moduli. Any AAAs with a large thrombus were found to have significant stronger growth in diameter than aneurysms with a small thrombus (P < .01). The stress reduction due to the thrombus showed the same trend for the idealized and patient-specific models, although the effect was overestimated by the idealized models and a considerable variation between patients was observed.
A larger thrombus in AAA was associated with a higher AAA growth rate, but also with a lower wall stress. Therefore, weakening of the AAA wall, under the influence of thrombus, may play a more imminent role in the process of AAA growth than the stress acting on the wall.
在决定是否进行腹主动脉瘤(AAA)的手术修复时,最大直径是主要因素。多项研究得出结论,对于个体患者而言,直径可能不是可靠的破裂风险标准,而壁面应力则具有更高的敏感性和特异性。AAA 壁面应力也可能是 AAA 生长的一个影响因素。本研究使用理想 AAA 模型和基于个体患者的 AAA 模型进行壁面应力计算,研究了腔内血栓对 AAA 壁面应力和生长速率的影响。
创建了理想 AAA 模型进行壁面应力分析。血栓被建模为不可压缩的线弹性材料,并固定在壁上。计算了一系列血栓体积和剪切模量下的壁面应力降低。对于 30 个具有不同血栓体积的患者特异性 AAA 模型,计算了有血栓和无血栓时的壁面应力。比较了血栓体积较小和较大的 AAA 的直径生长率。比较了理想模型和基于个体患者的模型之间的结果。
血栓导致壁面应力降低,血栓越大、弹性模量越高,壁面应力降低越明显。任何具有较大血栓的 AAA 都被发现其直径增长明显快于具有较小血栓的 AAA(P<0.01)。尽管理想模型高估了这种壁面应力降低,且患者之间存在相当大的差异,但血栓引起的壁面应力降低在理想模型和基于个体患者的模型中呈现出相同的趋势。
AAA 中的较大血栓与更高的 AAA 生长速率相关,但与较低的壁面应力相关。因此,在 AAA 生长过程中,血栓对 AAA 壁的削弱作用可能比作用于壁面的应力更为紧迫。