Numerical simulation of blood flow in femoral perfusion: comparison between side-armed femoral artery perfusion and direct femoral artery perfusion
Autor: | Shingo Kitamura, Takao Inamura, Wakako Fukuda, Ikuo Fukuda, Minori Shirota |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Biomedical Engineering Medicine (miscellaneous) Femoral artery 030204 cardiovascular system & hematology Iliac Artery Biomaterials 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine medicine.artery Catheterization Peripheral medicine Shear stress Humans Computer Simulation Aorta business.industry Extracorporeal circulation Hemodynamics Models Cardiovascular External iliac artery Blood flow Cannula Surgery Femoral Artery Perfusion surgical procedures operative 030228 respiratory system Flow velocity Regional Blood Flow Stress Mechanical Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business Blood Flow Velocity Biomedical engineering |
Zdroj: | Journal of Artificial Organs. 19:336-342 |
ISSN: | 1619-0904 1434-7229 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10047-016-0911-z |
Popis: | Computational numerical analysis was performed to elucidate the flow dynamics of femoral artery perfusion. Numerical simulation of blood flow was performed from the right femoral artery in an aortic model. An incompressible Navier-Stokes equation and continuity equation were solved using computed flow dynamics software. Three different perfusion models were analyzed: a 4.0-mm cannula (outer diameter 15 French size), a 5.2-mm cannula (18 French size) and an 8-mm prosthetic graft. The cannula was inserted parallel to the femoral artery, while the graft was anastomosed perpendicular to the femoral artery. Shear stress was highest with the 4-mm cannula (172 Pa) followed by the graft (127 Pa) and the 5.2-mm cannula (99 Pa). The cannula exit velocity was high, even when the 5.2-mm cannula was used. Although side-armed perfusion with an 8-mm graft generated a high shear stress area near the point of anastomosis, flow velocity at the external iliac artery was decreased. The jet speed decreased due to the Coanda effect caused by the recirculation behind sudden expansion of diameter, and the flow velocity maintains a constant speed after the reattachment length of the flow. This study showed that iliac artery shear stress was lower with the 5.2-mm cannula than with the 4-mm cannula when used for femoral perfusion. Side-armed graft perfusion generates a high shear stress area around the anastomotic site, but flow velocity in the iliac artery is slower in the graft model than in the 5.2-mm cannula model. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |