Valve-related modes of pump failure in collecting lymphatics: numerical and experimental investigation
Autor: | Michael J. Davis, Charles Macaskill, Christopher D. Bertram, Jr Je Moore |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Materials science
Contraction (grammar) Muscle Fibers Skeletal 0206 medical engineering 02 engineering and technology 030204 cardiovascular system & hematology Models Biological Article Lymphatic System 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Afterload Fluid–structure interaction Pressure medicine Animals Computer Simulation Boundary value problem Heart-Assist Devices Mechanical Engineering Numerical Analysis Computer-Assisted Anatomy Mechanics Heart Valves 020601 biomedical engineering Rats Perfusion Modeling and Simulation Isobaric process medicine.symptom Lymphangion Muscle Contraction Biotechnology Muscle contraction |
Zdroj: | Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology. 16:1987-2003 |
ISSN: | 1617-7940 1617-7959 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10237-017-0933-3 |
Popis: | Lymph is transported along collecting lymphatic vessels by intrinsic and extrinsic pumping. The walls have muscle of a type intermediate between blood-vascular smooth muscle and myocardium; a contracting segment between two valves (a lymphangion) constitutes a pump. This intrinsic mechanism is investigated ex vivo in isolated, spontaneously contracting, perfused segments subjected to controlled external pressures. The reaction to varying afterload is probed by slowly ramping up the outlet pressure until pumping fails. Often the failure occurs when the contraction raises intra-lymphangion pressure insufficiently to overcome the outlet pressure, open the outlet valve and cause ejection, but many segments fail by other means, the mechanisms of which are not clear. We here elucidate those mechanisms by resort to a numerical model. Experimental observations are paired with comparable findings from computer simulations, using a lumped-parameter model that incorporates previously measured valve properties, plus new measurements of active contractile and passive elastic properties, and the dependence of contraction frequency on transmural pressure, all taken from isobaric twitch contraction experiments in the same vessel. Surprisingly, the model predicts seven different possible modes of pump failure, each defined by a different sequence of valve events, with their occurrence depending on the parameter values and boundary conditions. Some, but not all, modes were found experimentally. Further model investigation reveals routes by which a vessel exhibiting one mode of failure might under altered circumstances exhibit another. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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