Feiger Bradley, Adebiyi Adebayo, Randles Amanda
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Comput Biol Med. 2021 Feb;129:104155. doi: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2020.104155. Epub 2020 Dec 9.
Computational blood flow models in large arteries elucidate valuable relationships between cardiovascular diseases and hemodynamics, leading to improvements in treatment planning and clinical decision making. One such application with potential to benefit from simulation is venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO), a support system for patients with cardiopulmonary failure. VA-ECMO patients develop high rates of neurological complications, partially due to abnormal blood flow throughout the vasculature from the VA-ECMO system. To better understand these hemodynamic changes, it is important to resolve complex local flow parameters derived from three-dimensional (3D) fluid dynamics while also capturing the impact of VA-ECMO support throughout the systemic arterial system. As high-resolution 3D simulations of the arterial network remain computationally expensive and intractable for large studies, a validated, multiscale model is needed to compute both global effects and high-fidelity local hemodynamics. In this work, we developed and demonstrated a framework to model hemodynamics in VA-ECMO patients using coupled 3D and one-dimensional (1D) models (1D→3D). We demonstrated the ability of these multiscale models to simulate complex flow patterns in specific regions of interest while capturing bulk flow throughout the systemic arterial system. We compared 1D, 3D, and 1D→3D coupled models and found that multiscale models were able to sufficiently capture both global and local hemodynamics in the cerebral arteries and aorta in VA-ECMO patients. This study is the first to develop and compare 1D, 3D, and 1D→ 3D coupled models on the larger arterial system scale in VA-ECMO patients, with potential use for other large scale applications.
大动脉中的计算血流模型阐明了心血管疾病与血流动力学之间的重要关系,有助于改进治疗方案规划和临床决策。静脉-动脉体外膜肺氧合(VA-ECMO)作为一种用于心肺功能衰竭患者的支持系统,就是一个有望从模拟中获益的应用实例。VA-ECMO患者发生神经并发症的几率很高,部分原因是VA-ECMO系统导致整个血管系统的血流异常。为了更好地理解这些血流动力学变化,解析从三维(3D)流体动力学得出的复杂局部血流参数,并同时捕捉VA-ECMO支持对整个体循环动脉系统的影响至关重要。由于对动脉网络进行高分辨率3D模拟的计算成本仍然很高,对于大型研究来说难以处理,因此需要一个经过验证的多尺度模型来计算整体效应和高保真局部血流动力学。在这项工作中,我们开发并展示了一个使用耦合3D和一维(1D)模型(1D→3D)对VA-ECMO患者的血流动力学进行建模的框架。我们展示了这些多尺度模型在捕捉体循环动脉系统整体血流的同时,模拟特定感兴趣区域复杂血流模式的能力。我们比较了1D、3D和1D→3D耦合模型,发现多尺度模型能够充分捕捉VA-ECMO患者脑动脉和主动脉中的整体和局部血流动力学。本研究首次在VA-ECMO患者的较大动脉系统尺度上开发并比较了1D、3D和1D→3D耦合模型,具有用于其他大规模应用的潜力。