Vahidkhah Koohyar, Bagchi Prosenjit
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.
Soft Matter. 2015 Mar 21;11(11):2097-109. doi: 10.1039/c4sm02686a.
We present a 3D computational modeling study of the transport of micro-scale drug carriers modeled as microparticles of different shapes (spherical, oblate, and prolate) in whole blood represented as a suspension of deformable red blood cells. The objective is to quantify the effect of microparticle shapes on their margination, near-wall dynamics and adhesion. We observe that the near-wall accumulation is highest for oblate particles of moderate aspect ratio, followed by spherical particles, and lowest for very elongated prolate particles. The result is explained using micro-scale dynamics of individual particles, and their interaction with red blood cells. We observe that the orientation of microparticles in 3D space and the frequency of their collisions with red blood cells are the key factors affecting their margination. We show that due to repeated collisions with red blood cells in the presence of a bounding wall, the axes of revolution of oblate particles align near the plane of the shear flow, but those of prolate particles shift towards the vorticity axis with a wider distribution. Such specific orientations lead to more frequent collisions and a greater lateral drift for oblate particles than microspheres, but less frequent collisions and a reduced lateral drift for elongated prolate particles, resulting in the observed differences in their near-wall accumulation. Once marginated, the particle shape has an entirely different effect on the likelihood of making particle-wall contacts. We find that marginated prolate particles, due to their alignment along the vorticity axis and large angular fluctuations, are more likely to make contacts with the wall than spherical and oblate particles. We further simulate the adhesion between flowing microparticles and the wall in the presence of red blood cells, and observe that once wall contacts are established, the likelihood of firm adhesion is greater for disk-like particles, followed by elongated prolates, and microspheres. Consequently, this study suggests that the local hemorheological conditions near the targeted sites must be taken into consideration while selecting the optimum shape of micro-scale vascular drug carriers.
我们展示了一项三维计算建模研究,该研究针对不同形状(球形、扁球形和长球形)的微粒形式的微观药物载体在以可变形红细胞悬浮液表示的全血中的传输情况。目的是量化微粒形状对其边缘化、近壁动力学和粘附的影响。我们观察到,中等纵横比的扁球形颗粒的近壁积累最高,其次是球形颗粒,而非常细长的长球形颗粒的近壁积累最低。利用单个颗粒的微观动力学及其与红细胞的相互作用对该结果进行了解释。我们观察到,微粒在三维空间中的取向及其与红细胞碰撞的频率是影响其边缘化的关键因素。我们表明,由于在有边界壁的情况下与红细胞的反复碰撞,扁球形颗粒的旋转轴在剪切流平面附近对齐,但长球形颗粒的旋转轴朝着涡度轴移动且分布更宽。这种特定取向导致扁球形颗粒比微球更频繁地碰撞和更大的横向漂移,但细长的长球形颗粒碰撞频率较低且横向漂移减小,从而导致观察到它们在近壁积累方面的差异。一旦边缘化,颗粒形状对颗粒与壁接触的可能性有完全不同的影响。我们发现,边缘化的长球形颗粒由于其沿涡度轴的排列和较大的角度波动,比球形和扁球形颗粒更有可能与壁接触。我们进一步模拟了在存在红细胞的情况下流动的微粒与壁之间的粘附,并观察到一旦建立壁接触,盘状颗粒牢固粘附的可能性更大,其次是细长的长球形颗粒,然后是微球。因此,这项研究表明,在选择微观尺度血管药物载体的最佳形状时,必须考虑靶向部位附近的局部血液流变学条件。