Reproducibility Study of Magnetic Resonance Image-Based Computational Fluid Dynamics Prediction of Carotid Bifurcation Flow
Autor: | AD Augst, Pascal Verdonck, X.Y. Xu, Quan Long, Sam Thom, A.D. Hughes, Fadi Glor, Ben Ariff |
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Rok vydání: | 2003 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Materials science Finite Element Analysis Biomedical Engineering Pulsatile flow Magnetic Resonance Imaging Cine Blood Pressure Computational fluid dynamics Sensitivity and Specificity Imaging Three-Dimensional Shear stress medicine Humans Computer Simulation Bifurcation Reproducibility medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry Models Cardiovascular Reproducibility of Results Magnetic resonance imaging Arteries Blood flow Coronary Vessels Shear (geology) Pulsatile Flow Hemorheology cardiovascular system Female Shear Strength business Blood Flow Velocity Biomedical engineering |
Zdroj: | Annals of Biomedical Engineering. 31:142-151 |
ISSN: | 0090-6964 |
DOI: | 10.1114/1.1537694 |
Popis: | The importance of shear stress in the initiation and progression of atherosclerosis has been recognized for some time. A novel way to quantify wall shear stress under physiologically realistic conditions is to combine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computational fluid dynamics. The present study aims to investigate the reproducibility of the simulated flow by using this combined approach. The right carotid bifurcations of eight healthy subjects were scanned twice with MRI within a few weeks. Three-dimensional geometries of the vessels were reconstructed for each scan and each subject. Pulsatile flows through these models were calculated to assess errors associated with the predicted flow parameters. This was done by comparing various wall shear stress indices, including the time-averaged wall shear stress (WSS), oscillating shear index (OSI), WSS Gradients (WSSG) and WSS Angle Deviation (WSSAD). Qualitatively, all the wall shear parameters proved to be highly reproducible. Quantitatively, the reproducibility was over 90% for OSI and WSSAD, but less impressive (60%) for other parameters. Our results indicated that WSS and WSSG values were extremely sensitive to subtle variations in local geometry and mesh design, particularly in regions around the bifurcation apex where WSS values were high and least reproducible. © 2003 Biomedical Engineering Society. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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