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1.
J Hepatol ; 74(3): 661-669, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33212089

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Despite improvements in medical and surgical techniques, post-hepatectomy liver failure (PHLF) remains the leading cause of postoperative death. High postoperative portal vein pressure (PPV) and portocaval gradient (PCG), which cannot be predicted by current tools, are the most important determinants of PHLF. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate a digital twin to predict the risk of postoperative portal hypertension (PHT). METHODS: We prospectively included 47 patients undergoing major hepatectomy. A mathematical (0D) model of the entire blood circulation was assessed and automatically calibrated from patient characteristics. Hepatic flows were obtained from preoperative flow MRI (n = 9), intraoperative flowmetry (n = 16), or estimated from cardiac output (n = 47). Resection was then simulated in these 3 groups and the computed PPV and PCG were compared to intraoperative data. RESULTS: Simulated post-hepatectomy pressures did not differ between the 3 groups, comparing well with collected data (no significant differences). In the entire cohort, the correlation between measured and simulated PPV values was good (r = 0.66, no adjustment to intraoperative events) or excellent (r = 0.75) after adjustment, as well as for PCG (respectively r = 0.59 and r = 0.80). The difference between simulated and measured post-hepatectomy PCG was ≤3 mmHg in 96% of cases. Four patients suffered from lethal PHLF for whom the model satisfactorily predicted their postoperative pressures. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrated that a 0D model could correctly anticipate postoperative PHT, even using estimated hepatic flow rates as input data. If this major conceptual step is confirmed, this algorithm could change our practice toward more tailor-made procedures, while ensuring satisfactory outcomes. LAY SUMMARY: Post-hepatectomy portal hypertension is a major cause of liver failure and death, but no tool is available to accurately anticipate this potentially lethal complication for a given patient. Herein, we propose using a mathematical model to predict the portocaval gradient at the end of liver resection. We tested this model on a cohort of 47 patients undergoing major hepatectomy and demonstrated that it could modify current surgical decision-making algorithms.


Subject(s)
Clinical Decision-Making/methods , Hepatectomy/adverse effects , Hypertension, Portal/etiology , Liver Failure/etiology , Models, Theoretical , Postoperative Complications/etiology , Aged , Feasibility Studies , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Hypertension, Portal/diagnostic imaging , Liver Failure/diagnostic imaging , Liver Function Tests , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Portal Pressure , Portal Vein/physiopathology , Postoperative Complications/diagnostic imaging , Prognosis , Prospective Studies , Risk Factors
2.
Development ; 145(20)2018 10 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30333235

ABSTRACT

Growth and remodeling of the primitive pharyngeal arch artery (PAA) network into the extracardiac great vessels is poorly understood but a major source of clinically serious malformations. Undisrupted blood flow is required for normal PAA development, yet specific relationships between hemodynamics and remodeling remain largely unknown. Meeting this challenge is hindered by the common reductionist analysis of morphology to single idealized models, where in fact structural morphology varies substantially. Quantitative technical tools that allow tracking of morphological and hemodynamic changes in a population-based setting are essential to advancing our understanding of morphogenesis. Here, we have developed a methodological pipeline from high-resolution nano-computed tomography imaging and live-imaging flow measurements to multiscale pulsatile computational models. We combine experimental-based computational models of multiple PAAs to quantify hemodynamic forces in the rapidly morphing Hamburger Hamilton (HH) stage HH18, HH24 and HH26 embryos. We identify local morphological variation along the PAAs and their association with specific hemodynamic changes. Population-level mechano-morphogenic variability analysis is a powerful strategy for identifying stage-specific regions of well and poorly tolerated morphological and/or hemodynamic variation that may protect or initiate cardiovascular malformations.


Subject(s)
Aorta, Thoracic/embryology , Aorta, Thoracic/physiology , Branchial Region/embryology , Branchial Region/physiology , Hemodynamics/physiology , Vascular Remodeling , Anatomic Landmarks , Animals , Chick Embryo , Computer Simulation , Hydrodynamics , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Pulse Wave Analysis , Reproducibility of Results
3.
Ann Surg ; 268(1): 134-142, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28151798

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate safety and efficacy of temporary portal hemodynamics modulation with a novel percutaneously adjustable vascular ring (MID-AVR) onto a porcine model of 75% hepatectomy. BACKGROUND: Postoperative liver failure is a leading cause of mortality after major hepatectomy. Portal flow modulation is an increasingly accepted concept to prevent postoperative liver failure. Nonetheless, the current strategies have shortcomings. METHODS: Resection was performed under hemodynamic monitoring in 17 large, white pigs allocated into 2 groups. Eight pigs had ring around the portal vein for 3 days with the aim of reducing changes in hemodynamics due to hepatectomy. Analysis of hemodynamics, laboratory, and histopathological parameters was performed. RESULTS: Percutaneous inflation, deflation, and removal of the MID-AVR were safe. Two (25%) pigs in the MID-AVR group and 4 (45%) controls died before day 3 (P = NS). A moderate increase of portal flow rate per liver mass after resection was associated with better survival (P = 0.017). The portocaval pressure gradient was lower after hepatectomy in the MID-AVR group (P = 0.001). Postoperative serum bilirubin levels were lower in the MID-AVR group (P = 0.007 at day 5). In the MID-AVR group, the Ki67 index was significantly higher on day 3 (P = 0.043) and the architectural derangement was lower (P < 0.05). Morphometric quantification of the bile canaliculi revealed a significantly lower number of intersection branches (P < 0.05) and intersection nodes (P < 0.001) on day 7 compared with the preoperative specimen, in the control group. These differences were not found in the ring group. CONCLUSIONS: MID-AVR is safe for portal hemodynamics modulation. It might improve liver regeneration by protecting liver microarchitecture.


Subject(s)
Hepatectomy , Liver Regeneration , Portal Pressure , Portal Vein/surgery , Postoperative Care/instrumentation , Vascular Surgical Procedures/instrumentation , Animals , Female , Liver Failure/etiology , Liver Failure/prevention & control , Postoperative Care/methods , Postoperative Complications/prevention & control , Random Allocation , Swine , Treatment Outcome , Vascular Surgical Procedures/methods
4.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 12(2): e1004412, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26866479

ABSTRACT

We develop a quantitative single cell-based mathematical model for multi-cellular tumor spheroids (MCTS) of SK-MES-1 cells, a non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell line, growing under various nutrient conditions: we confront the simulations performed with this model with data on the growth kinetics and spatial labeling patterns for cell proliferation, extracellular matrix (ECM), cell distribution and cell death. We start with a simple model capturing part of the experimental observations. We then show, by performing a sensitivity analysis at each development stage of the model that its complexity needs to be stepwise increased to account for further experimental growth conditions. We thus ultimately arrive at a model that mimics the MCTS growth under multiple conditions to a great extent. Interestingly, the final model, is a minimal model capable of explaining all data simultaneously in the sense, that the number of mechanisms it contains is sufficient to explain the data and missing out any of its mechanisms did not permit fit between all data and the model within physiological parameter ranges. Nevertheless, compared to earlier models it is quite complex i.e., it includes a wide range of mechanisms discussed in biological literature. In this model, the cells lacking oxygen switch from aerobe to anaerobe glycolysis and produce lactate. Too high concentrations of lactate or too low concentrations of ATP promote cell death. Only if the extracellular matrix density overcomes a certain threshold, cells are able to enter the cell cycle. Dying cells produce a diffusive growth inhibitor. Missing out the spatial information would not permit to infer the mechanisms at work. Our findings suggest that this iterative data integration together with intermediate model sensitivity analysis at each model development stage, provide a promising strategy to infer predictive yet minimal (in the above sense) quantitative models of tumor growth, as prospectively of other tissue organization processes. Importantly, calibrating the model with two nutriment-rich growth conditions, the outcome for two nutriment-poor growth conditions could be predicted. As the final model is however quite complex, incorporating many mechanisms, space, time, and stochastic processes, parameter identification is a challenge. This calls for more efficient strategies of imaging and image analysis, as well as of parameter identification in stochastic agent-based simulations.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/physiopathology , Computational Biology/methods , Models, Biological , Algorithms , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Proliferation , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , In Situ Nick-End Labeling , Spheroids, Cellular , Tumor Cells, Cultured
6.
J Surg Res ; 186(1): 44-55, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23993199

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Computational fluid dynamics has been increasingly used in congenital heart surgery to simulate pathophysiological blood flow, investigate surgical options, or design medical devices. Several commercial and research computational or numerical codes have been developed. They present different approaches to numerically solve the blood flow equations, raising the question whether these numerical codes are equally reliable to achieve accurate simulation results. Accordingly, we sought to examine the influence of numerical code selection in several complex congenital cardiac operations. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The main steps of blood flow simulations are detailed (geometrical mesh, boundary conditions, and solver numerical methods) for congenital cardiac operations of increasing complexity. The first case tests different numerical solutions against an analytical, or exact, solution. In the second case, the three-dimensional domain is a patient-specific superior cavopulmonary anastomosis. As an analytical solution does not exist in such a complex geometry, different numerical solutions are compared. Finally, a realistic case of a systemic-to-pulmonary shunt is presented with both geometrically and physiologically challenging conditions. For all, solutions from a commercially available code and an open-source research code are compared. RESULTS: In the first case, as the mesh or solver numerical method is refined, the simulation results for both codes converged to the analytical solution. In the second example, velocity differences between the two codes are greater when the resolution of the mesh were lower and less refined. The third case with realistic anatomy reveals that the pulsatile complex flow is very similar for both codes. CONCLUSIONS: The precise setup of the numerical cases has more influence on the results than the choice of numerical codes. The need for detailed construction of the numerical model that requires high computational cost depends on the precision needed to answer the biomedical question at hand and should be assessed for each problem on a combination of clinically relevant patient-specific geometry and physiological conditions.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Heart Defects, Congenital/surgery , Hydrodynamics , Blood Circulation , Humans , Models, Cardiovascular , Pulsatile Flow/physiology
7.
J Biomech Eng ; 135(1): 011002, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23363213

ABSTRACT

Single ventricle heart defects are among the most serious congenital heart diseases, and are uniformly fatal if left untreated. Typically, a three-staged surgical course, consisting of the Norwood, Glenn, and Fontan surgeries is performed, after which the superior vena cava (SVC) and inferior vena cava (IVC) are directly connected to the pulmonary arteries (PA). In an attempt to improve hemodynamic performance and hepatic flow distribution (HFD) of Fontan patients, a novel Y-shaped graft has recently been proposed to replace the traditional tube-shaped extracardiac grafts. Previous studies have demonstrated that the Y-graft is a promising design with the potential to reduce energy loss and improve HFD. However these studies also found suboptimal Y-graft performance in some patient models. The goal of this work is to determine whether performance can be improved in these models through further design optimization. Geometric and hemodynamic factors that influence the HFD have not been sufficiently investigated in previous work, particularly for the Y-graft. In this work, we couple Lagrangian particle tracking to an optimal design framework to study the effects of boundary conditions and geometry on HFD. Specifically, we investigate the potential of using a Y-graft design with unequal branch diameters to improve hepatic distribution under a highly uneven RPA/LPA flow split. As expected, the resulting optimal Y-graft geometry largely depends on the pulmonary flow split for a particular patient. The unequal branch design is demonstrated to be unnecessary under most conditions, as it is possible to achieve the same or better performance with equal-sized branches. Two patient-specific examples show that optimization-derived Y-grafts effectively improve the HFD, compared to initial nonoptimized designs using equal branch diameters. An instance of constrained optimization shows that energy efficiency slightly increases with increasing branch size for the Y-graft, but that a smaller branch size is preferred when a proximal anastomosis is needed to achieve optimal HFD.


Subject(s)
Fontan Procedure/methods , Liver/blood supply , Models, Biological , Regional Blood Flow , Algorithms , Hemodynamics , Humans , Vena Cava, Inferior/physiology , Vena Cava, Inferior/surgery , Vena Cava, Superior/physiology , Vena Cava, Superior/surgery
8.
Front Bioinform ; 3: 977228, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37122998

ABSTRACT

Dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) perfusion imaging has shown great potential to non-invasively assess cancer development and its treatment by their characteristic tissue signatures. Different tracer kinetics models are being applied to estimate tissue and tumor perfusion parameters from DCE perfusion imaging. The goal of this work is to provide an in silico model-based pipeline to evaluate how these DCE imaging parameters may relate to the true tissue parameters. As histology data provides detailed microstructural but not functional parameters, this work can also help to better interpret such data. To this aim in silico vasculatures are constructed and the spread of contrast agent in the tissue is simulated. As a proof of principle we show the evaluation procedure of two tracer kinetic models from in silico contrast-agent perfusion data after a bolus injection. Representative microvascular arterial and venous trees are constructed in silico. Blood flow is computed in the different vessels. Contrast-agent input in the feeding artery, intra-vascular transport, intra-extravascular exchange and diffusion within the interstitial space are modeled. From this spatiotemporal model, intensity maps are computed leading to in silico dynamic perfusion images. Various tumor vascularizations (architecture and function) are studied and show spatiotemporal contrast imaging dynamics characteristic of in vivo tumor morphotypes. The Brix II also called 2CXM, and extended Tofts tracer-kinetics models common in DCE imaging are then applied to recover perfusion parameters that are compared with the ground truth parameters of the in silico spatiotemporal models. The results show that tumor features can be well identified for a certain permeability range. The simulation results in this work indicate that taking into account space explicitly to estimate perfusion parameters may lead to significant improvements in the perfusion interpretation of the current tracer-kinetics models.

9.
J Biomech Eng ; 134(5): 051002, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22757490

ABSTRACT

An idealized systemic-to-pulmonary shunt anatomy is parameterized and coupled to a closed loop, lumped parameter network (LPN) in a multidomain model of the Norwood surgical anatomy. The LPN approach is essential for obtaining information on global changes in cardiac output and oxygen delivery resulting from changes in local geometry and physiology. The LPN is fully coupled to a custom 3D finite element solver using a semi-implicit approach to model the heart and downstream circulation. This closed loop multidomain model is then integrated with a fully automated derivative-free optimization algorithm to obtain optimal shunt geometries with variable parameters of shunt diameter, anastomosis location, and angles. Three objective functions: (1) systemic; (2) coronary; and (3) combined systemic and coronary oxygen deliveries are maximized. Results show that a smaller shunt diameter with a distal shunt-brachiocephalic anastomosis is optimal for systemic oxygen delivery, whereas a more proximal anastomosis is optimal for coronary oxygen delivery and a shunt between these two anatomies is optimal for both systemic and coronary oxygen deliveries. Results are used to quantify the origin of blood flow going through the shunt and its relationship with shunt geometry. Results show that coronary artery flow is directly related to shunt position.


Subject(s)
Models, Biological , Norwood Procedures/methods , Blood Circulation , Cardiac Output , Coronary Vessels/physiology , Lung/blood supply , Oxygen/metabolism , Pressure , Stress, Mechanical
10.
J Biomech Eng ; 133(8): 081003, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21950896

ABSTRACT

It is well known that blood vessels exhibit viscoelastic properties, which are modeled in the literature with different mathematical forms and experimental bases. The wide range of existing viscoelastic wall models may produce significantly different blood flow, pressure, and vessel deformation solutions in cardiovascular simulations. In this paper, we present a novel comparative study of two different viscoelastic wall models in nonlinear one-dimensional (1D) simulations of blood flow. The viscoelastic models are from papers by Holenstein et al. in 1980 (model V1) and Valdez-Jasso et al. in 2009 (model V2). The static elastic or zero-frequency responses of both models are chosen to be identical. The nonlinear 1D blood flow equations incorporating wall viscoelasticity are solved using a space-time finite element method and the implementation is verified with the Method of Manufactured Solutions. Simulation results using models V1, V2 and the common static elastic model are compared in three application examples: (i) wave propagation study in an idealized vessel with reflection-free outflow boundary condition; (ii) carotid artery model with nonperiodic boundary conditions; and (iii) subject-specific abdominal aorta model under rest and simulated lower limb exercise conditions. In the wave propagation study the damping and wave speed were largest for model V2 and lowest for the elastic model. In the carotid and abdominal aorta studies the most significant differences between wall models were observed in the hysteresis (pressure-area) loops, which were larger for V2 than V1, indicating that V2 is a more dissipative model. The cross-sectional area oscillations over the cardiac cycle were smaller for the viscoelastic models compared to the elastic model. In the abdominal aorta study, differences between constitutive models were more pronounced under exercise conditions than at rest. Inlet pressure pulse for model V1 was larger than the pulse for V2 and the elastic model in the exercise case. In this paper, we have successfully implemented and verified two viscoelastic wall models in a nonlinear 1D finite element blood flow solver and analyzed differences between these models in various idealized and physiological simulations, including exercise. The computational model of blood flow presented here can be utilized in further studies of the cardiovascular system incorporating viscoelastic wall properties.


Subject(s)
Arteries/anatomy & histology , Arteries/physiology , Blood Circulation , Elasticity , Finite Element Analysis , Models, Biological , Aorta, Abdominal/physiology , Carotid Arteries/physiology , Exercise/physiology , Hemorheology , Humans , Nonlinear Dynamics , Rest/physiology , Viscosity
11.
J Biomech Eng ; 133(9): 091008, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22010743

ABSTRACT

Treatments for coarctation of the aorta (CoA) can alleviate blood pressure (BP) gradients (Δ), but long-term morbidity still exists that can be explained by altered indices of hemodynamics and biomechanics. We introduce a technique to increase our understanding of these indices for CoA under resting and nonresting conditions, quantify their contribution to morbidity, and evaluate treatment options. Patient-specific computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models were created from imaging and BP data for one normal and four CoA patients (moderate native CoA: Δ12 mmHg, severe native CoA: Δ25 mmHg and postoperative end-to-end and end-to-side patients: Δ0 mmHg). Simulations incorporated vessel deformation, downstream vascular resistance and compliance. Indices including cyclic strain, time-averaged wall shear stress (TAWSS), and oscillatory shear index (OSI) were quantified. Simulations replicated resting BP and blood flow data. BP during simulated exercise for the normal patient matched reported values. Greatest exercise-induced increases in systolic BP and mean and peak ΔBP occurred for the moderate native CoA patient (SBP: 115 to 154 mmHg; mean and peak ΔBP: 31 and 73 mmHg). Cyclic strain was elevated proximal to the coarctation for native CoA patients, but reduced throughout the aorta after treatment. A greater percentage of vessels was exposed to subnormal TAWSS or elevated OSI for CoA patients. Local patterns of these indices reported to correlate with atherosclerosis in normal patients were accentuated by CoA. These results apply CFD to a range of CoA patients for the first time and provide the foundation for future progress in this area.


Subject(s)
Aortic Coarctation/physiopathology , Computer Simulation , Hemodynamics , Aortic Coarctation/pathology , Aortic Coarctation/surgery , Biomechanical Phenomena , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Models, Anatomic , Postoperative Period , Stress, Mechanical
12.
Int J Numer Method Biomed Eng ; 37(2): e3422, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33249746

ABSTRACT

When modeling a detoxifying organ function, an important component is the impact of flow on the metabolism of a compound of interest carried by the blood. We here study the effects of red blood cells (such as the Fahraeus-Lindqvist effect and plasma skimming) on blood flow in typical microcirculatory components such as tubes, bifurcations and entire networks, with particular emphasis on the liver as important representative of detoxifying organs. In one of the plasma skimming models, under certain conditions, oscillations between states are found and analyzed in a methodical study to identify their causes and influencing parameters. The flow solution obtained is then used to define the velocity at which a compound would be transported. A convection-reaction equation is studied to simulate the transport of a compound in blood and its uptake by the surrounding cells. Different types of signal sharpness have to be handled depending on the application to address different temporal compound concentration profiles. To permit executing the studied models numerically stable and accurate, we here extend existing transport schemes to handle converging bifurcations, and more generally multi-furcations. We study the accuracy of different numerical schemes as well as the effect of reactions and of the network itself on the bolus shape. Even though this study is guided by applications in liver micro-architecture, the proposed methodology is general and can readily be applied to other capillary network geometries, hence to other organs or to bioengineered network designs.


Subject(s)
Convection , Models, Cardiovascular , Blood Flow Velocity , Computer Simulation , Hemodynamics , Microcirculation
13.
Ann Biomed Eng ; 49(12): 3227-3242, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34117583

ABSTRACT

Mechanical forces are essential for proper growth and remodeling of the primitive pharyngeal arch arteries (PAAs) into the great vessels of the heart. Despite general acknowledgement of a hemodynamic-malformation link, the direct correlation between hemodynamics and PAA morphogenesis remains poorly understood. The elusiveness is largely due to difficulty in performing isolated hemodynamic perturbations and quantifying changes in-vivo. Previous in-vivo arch artery occlusion/ablation experiments either did not isolate the effects of hemodynamics, did not analyze the results in a 3D context or did not consider the effects of varying degrees of occlusion. Here, we overcome these limitations by combining minimally invasive occlusion experiments in the avian embryo with 3D anatomical models of development and in-silico testing of experimental phenomenon. We detail morphological and hemodynamic changes 24 hours post vessel occlusion. 3D anatomical models showed that occlusion geometries had more circular cross-sectional areas and more elongated arches than their control counterparts. Computational fluid dynamics revealed a marked change in wall shear stress-morphology trends. Instantaneous (in-silico) occlusion models provided mechanistic insights into the dynamic vessel adaptation process, predicting pressure-area trends for a number of experimental occlusion arches. We follow the propagation of small defects in a single embryo Hamburger Hamilton (HH) Stage 18 embryo to a more serious defect in an HH29 embryo. Results demonstrate that hemodynamic perturbation of the presumptive aortic arch, through varying degrees of vessel occlusion, overrides natural growth mechanisms and prevents it from becoming the dominant arch of the aorta.


Subject(s)
Aorta, Thoracic/embryology , Models, Cardiovascular , Pharynx/blood supply , Animals , Aorta, Thoracic/diagnostic imaging , Aorta, Thoracic/physiology , Blood Flow Velocity , Chick Embryo , Hemodynamics , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Morphogenesis , Pulsatile Flow , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Ultrasonography, Doppler
14.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 11180, 2021 05 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34045500

ABSTRACT

Anatomical and physiological changes alter airflow characteristics and aerosol distribution in the developing lung. Correlation between age and aerosol dosimetry is needed, specifically because youth are more susceptible to medication side effects. In this study, we estimate aerosol dosages (particle diameters of 1, 3, and 5 [Formula: see text]m) in a 3 month-old infant, a 6 year-old child, and a 36 year-old adult by performing whole lung subject-specific particle simulations throughout respiration. For 3 [Formula: see text]m diameter particles we estimate total deposition as 88, 73, and [Formula: see text] and the conducting versus respiratory deposition ratios as 4.0, 0.5, and 0.4 for the infant, child, and adult, respectively. Due to their lower tidal volumes and functional residual capacities the deposited mass is smaller while the tissue concentrations are larger in the infant and child subjects, compared to the adult. Furthermore, we find that dose cannot be predicted by simply scaling by tidal volumes. These results highlight the need for additional clinical and computational studies that investigate the efficiency of treatment, while optimizing dosage levels in order to alleviate side effects, in youth.


Subject(s)
Administration, Inhalation , Aerosols , Lung , Models, Theoretical , Adult , Child , Computer Simulation , Humans , Infant
15.
Int J Numer Method Biomed Eng ; 36(2): e3266, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31617679

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we perform a verification study of the Coupled-Momentum Method (CMM), a 3D fluid-structure interaction (FSI) model which uses a thin linear elastic membrane and linear kinematics to describe the mechanical behavior of the vessel wall. The verification of this model is done using Womersley's deformable wall analytical solution for pulsatile flow in a semi-infinite cylindrical vessel. This solution is, under certain premises, the analytical solution of the CMM and can thus be used for model verification. For the numerical solution, we employ an impedance boundary condition to define a reflection-free outflow boundary condition and thus mimic the physics of the analytical solution, which is defined on a semi-infinite domain. We first provide a rigorous derivation of Womersley's deformable wall theory via scale analysis. We then illustrate different characteristics of the analytical solution such as space-time wave periodicity and attenuation. Finally, we present the verification tests comparing the CMM with Womersley's theory.


Subject(s)
Pulsatile Flow/physiology , Algorithms , Animals , Blood Circulation/physiology , Blood Flow Velocity/physiology , Carotid Arteries/physiology , Humans
16.
Eur J Pharm Sci ; 115: 304-319, 2018 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29339226

ABSTRACT

The indocyanine green (ICG) clearance, presented as plasma disappearance rate is, presently, a reliable method to estimate the hepatic "function". However, this technique is not instantaneously available and thus cannot been used intra-operatively (during liver surgery). Near-infrared spectroscopy enables to assess hepatic ICG concentration over time in the liver tissue. This article proposes to extract more information from the liver intensity dynamics by interpreting it through a dedicated pharmacokinetics model. In order to account for the different exchanges between the liver tissues, the proposed model includes three compartments for the liver model (sinusoids, hepatocytes and bile canaliculi). The model output dependency to parameters is studied with sensitivity analysis and solving an inverse problem on synthetic data. The estimation of model parameters is then performed with in-vivo measurements in rabbits (El-Desoky et al. 1999). Parameters for different liver states are estimated, and their link with liver function is investigated. A non-linear (Michaelis-Menten type) excretion rate from the hepatocytes to the bile canaliculi was necessary to reproduce the measurements for different liver conditions. In case of bile duct ligation, the model suggests that this rate is reduced, and that the ICG is stored in the hepatocytes. Moreover, the level of ICG remains high in the blood following the ligation of the bile duct. The percentage of retention of indocyanine green in blood, which is a common test for hepatic function estimation, is also investigated with the model. The impact of bile duct ligation and reduced liver inflow on the percentage of ICG retention in blood is studied. The estimation of the pharmacokinetics model parameters may lead to an evaluation of different liver functions.


Subject(s)
Indocyanine Green/administration & dosage , Liver/drug effects , Liver/physiology , Animals , Bile/drug effects , Coloring Agents/administration & dosage , Fluorescence , Hepatocytes/drug effects , Liver Diseases/physiopathology , Rabbits , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared/methods
17.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 65(11): 2450-2458, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29993472

ABSTRACT

GOAL: This manuscript evaluates atrioventric-ular valve regurgitation (AVVR) in babies born with an already very challenging heart condition, i.e., with single ventricle physiology. Although the second surgery that single ventricle patients undergo is thought to decrease AVVR, there is much controversy in the clinical literature about AVVR treatment. METHODS: The effect of AVVR on Stage 1 haemodynamics and resulting acute changes from conversion to Stage 2 circulation in single ventricle patients are analyzed through lumped parameter models. Several degrees of AVVR severity are analyzed, for two types of valve regurgitation: incomplete leaflet closure and valve prolapse. RESULTS: The models show that increasing AVVR in Stage 1 induces the following effects: first, higher stroke volume and associated decrease in ventricular end-systolic volume; second, increase in atrial volumes with V-loop enlargement in pressure-volume curves; third, pulmonary venous hypertension. The Stage 2 surgery results in volume unloading of the ventricle, thereby, driving a decrease in AVVR. However, this effect is offset by an increase in ventricular pressures resulting in a net increase in regurgitation fraction (RF) of approximately 0.1 (for example, in severe AVVR, the preoperative RF increases from 60% to 70% postoperatively). Moreover, despite some improvements to sarcomere function early after Stage 2 surgery, it may deteriorate in cases of severe AVVR. CONCLUSION: In patients with moderate to severe AVVR, restoration of atrioventricular valve competence prior to, or at the time of, Stage 2 surgery would likely lead to improved haemodynamics and clinical outcome as the models suggest that uncorrected AVVR can worsen across Stage 2 surgery. This was found to be independent of the AVVR degree and mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Heart Valve Diseases/physiopathology , Heart Valves/physiopathology , Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome/physiopathology , Models, Cardiovascular , Hemodynamics/physiology , Humans , Infant
18.
Congenit Heart Dis ; 13(2): 241-250, 2018 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29194961

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Up to 90% of individuals with Alagille syndrome have congenital heart diseases. Peripheral pulmonary artery stenosis (PPS), resulting in right ventricular hypertension and pulmonary flow disparity, is one of the most common abnormalities, yet the hemodynamic effects are ill-defined, and optimal patient management and treatment strategies are not well established. The purpose of this pilot study is to use recently refined computational simulation in the setting of multiple surgical strategies, to examine the influence of pulmonary artery reconstruction on hemodynamics in this population. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Based on computed tomography angiography and cardiac catheterization data, preoperative pulmonary artery models were constructed for 4 patients with Alagille syndrome with PPS (all male, age range: 0.6-2.9 years), and flow simulations with deformable walls were performed. Surgeon directed virtual surgery, mimicking the surgical procedure, was then performed to derive postoperative models. Postoperative simulation-derived hemodynamics and blood flow distribution were then compared with the clinical results. RESULTS: Simulations confirmed substantial resistance, resulting from preoperative severe ostial stenoses, and the use of newly developed adaptive outflow boundary conditions led to excellent agreement with in vivo measurements. Relief of PPS decreased pulmonary artery pressures and improved pulmonary flow distribution both in vivo and in silico with good correlation. CONCLUSIONS: Using adaptive outflow boundary conditions, computational simulations can estimate postoperative overall pulmonary flow distribution in patients with Alagille syndrome after pulmonary artery reconstruction. Obstruction relief along with pulmonary artery vasodilation determines postoperative pulmonary flow distribution and newer methods can incorporate these physiologic changes. Evolving blood flow simulations may be useful in surgical or transcatheter planning and in understanding the complex interplay among various obstructions in patients with peripheral pulmonary stenosis.


Subject(s)
Alagille Syndrome/surgery , Blood Flow Velocity/physiology , Cardiac Surgical Procedures , Computer Simulation , Pulmonary Artery/physiopathology , Pulmonary Circulation/physiology , Stenosis, Pulmonary Artery/surgery , Abnormalities, Multiple , Alagille Syndrome/diagnosis , Alagille Syndrome/physiopathology , Cardiac Catheterization , Child, Preschool , Computed Tomography Angiography , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Infant , Male , Pilot Projects , Postoperative Period , Pulmonary Artery/diagnostic imaging , Stenosis, Pulmonary Artery/diagnosis , Stenosis, Pulmonary Artery/physiopathology , Vascular Resistance/physiology
19.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 65(10): 2311-2322, 2018 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29993530

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Cirrhosis is the common end stage of any given chronic liver disease, developing after persistent destruction and regeneration of parenchymal liver cells. The associated architectural distortion increases the intrahepatic vascular resistance, leading to portal hypertension and systemic circulatory disorders. This study investigates the impact of the changing vascular resistances on the hepatic and global circulation hemodynamics during cirrhogenesis. METHODS: Cirrhogenesis was revisited using the thioacetamide rat model (N = 20). Rats were sacrificed at weeks 0, 6, 12, and 18. For each time-point, three-dimensional vascular geometries were created by combining hepatic vascular corrosion casting with µCT imaging. Morphological quantification of the trees branching topology provided the input for a lobe-specific lumped parameter model of the liver that was coupled to a closed-loop model of the entire circulation of the rat. Hemodynamics was simulated in physiological and pathological circumstances. RESULTS: The simulations showed the effect of the liver vascular resistances (driven by the hepatic venous resistance increase) on liver hemodynamics with portal hypertension observed after 12 weeks. The closed-loop model was further adapted to account for systemic circulatory compensation mechanisms and disorders frequently observed in cirrhosis and simulated their impact on the hepatic, systemic, and pulmonary hemodynamics. CONCLUSION: The simulations explain how vascular changes due to cirrhosis severely disrupt both hepatic and global hemodynamics. SIGNIFICANCE: This study is a priori the first to model the rat's entire blood circulation during cirrhogenesis. Since it is able to simulate cirrhosis main characteristics, the model may be translated to humans for the assessment of liver interventions.


Subject(s)
Hemodynamics/physiology , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Liver Circulation/physiology , Liver Cirrhosis/diagnostic imaging , Liver Cirrhosis/physiopathology , Models, Cardiovascular , Animals , Computer Simulation , Corrosion Casting , Male , Rats , Rats, Wistar , X-Ray Microtomography
20.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 37(1): 35-46, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28463188

ABSTRACT

Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) is a key non-invasive imaging technique for cancer diagnosis and tumor treatment assessment, reflecting Brownian movement of water molecules in tissues. Since densely packed cells restrict molecule mobility, tumor tissues produce usually higher signal (a.k.a. less attenuated signal) on isotropic maps compared with normal tissues. However, no general quantitative relation between DWI data and the cell density has been established. In order to link low-resolution clinical cross-sectional data with high-resolution histological information, we developed an image processing and analysis chain, which was used to study the correlation between the diffusion coefficient (D value) estimated from DWI and tumor cellularity from serial histological slides of a resected non-small cell lung cancer tumor. Color deconvolution followed by cell nuclei segmentation was performed on digitized histological images to determine local and cell-type specific 2d (two-dimensional) densities. From these, the 3d cell density was inferred by a model-based sampling technique, which is necessary for the calculation of local and global 3d tumor cell count. Next, DWI sequence information was overlaid with high-resolution CT data and the resected histology using prominent anatomical hallmarks for co-registration of histology tissue blocks and non-invasive imaging modalities' data. The integration of cell numbers information and DWI data derived from different tumor areas revealed a clear negative correlation between cell density and D value. Importantly, spatial tumor cell density can be calculated based on DWI data. In summary, our results demonstrate that tumor cell count and heterogeneity can be predicted from DWI data, which may open new opportunities for personalized diagnosis and therapy optimization.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/diagnostic imaging , Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Histocytochemistry/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Lung Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Algorithms , Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/pathology , Cell Count/methods , Cell Nucleus/physiology , Humans , Lung Neoplasms/pathology
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