Lueshen Eric, Tangen Kevin, Mehta Ankit I, Linninger Andreas
University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of Bioengineering, Laboratory for Product and Process Design, 851 S. Morgan St. - 218 SEO, Chicago, IL 60607-7000, USA.
University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of Neurosurgery, 451N NPI MC 799, 912 S. Wood St., Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Med Eng Phys. 2017 Jul;45:15-24. doi: 10.1016/j.medengphy.2017.02.018. Epub 2017 May 3.
Convection-enhanced delivery (CED) is an invasive drug delivery technique used to target specific regions of the brain for the treatment of cancer and neurodegenerative diseases while bypassing the blood-brain barrier. In order to prevent the possibility of backflow, low volumetric flow rates are applied which limit the achievable drug distribution volumes from CED. This can render CED treatment ineffective since a small convective flow produces narrow drug distribution inside the treatment region. Novel catheter designs and CED protocols are needed to improve the drug distribution inside the treatment region. This is especially important when administering toxic chemotherapeutics which could adversely affect other organs if backflow occurred and these drugs entered the circulating blood stream. In order to help elucidate the causes of backflow and to design backflow-free catheters, we have studied the impact that microfluid flow has on deformable brain phantom gels experimentally as well as numerically. We found that fluid injections into porous media have considerable effects on local transport properties such as porosity and hydraulic conductivity. These phenomena not only alter the bulk flow velocity distribution of the microfluid flow due to the changing porosity, but significantly modify flow direction and even volumetric flow distribution due to induced local hydraulic conductivity anisotropy. These studies led us to the development of novel backflow-free catheters with safe volumetric flow rates up to 10 µL/min. The catheter designs, numerical simulations and experimental results are described throughout this article.
对流增强递送(CED)是一种侵入性药物递送技术,用于绕过血脑屏障,将特定脑部区域作为治疗癌症和神经退行性疾病的靶点。为了防止回流的可能性,采用了低体积流速,这限制了CED可实现的药物分布体积。这可能会使CED治疗无效,因为小对流会在治疗区域内产生狭窄的药物分布。需要新颖的导管设计和CED方案来改善治疗区域内的药物分布。当施用有毒化疗药物时,这一点尤为重要,如果发生回流且这些药物进入循环血流,可能会对其他器官产生不利影响。为了帮助阐明回流的原因并设计无回流导管,我们通过实验和数值方法研究了微流体流动对可变形脑模拟凝胶的影响。我们发现,向多孔介质中注入流体对局部传输特性(如孔隙率和水力传导率)有相当大的影响。这些现象不仅会由于孔隙率的变化而改变微流体流动的总体流速分布,还会由于诱导的局部水力传导率各向异性而显著改变流动方向甚至体积流量分布。这些研究促使我们开发出新型无回流导管,其安全体积流速可达10微升/分钟。本文将介绍导管设计、数值模拟和实验结果。