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1.
Perfusion ; : 2676591231187962, 2023 Jul 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37395266

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: A well-known complication of veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA ECMO) is differential hypoxia, in which poorly-oxygenated blood ejected from the left ventricle mixes with and displaces well-oxygenated blood from the circuit, thereby causing cerebral hypoxia and ischemia. We sought to characterize the impact of patient size and anatomy on cerebral perfusion under a range of different VA ECMO flow conditions. METHODS: We use one-dimensional (1D) flow simulations to investigate mixing zone location and cerebral perfusion across 10 different levels of VA ECMO support in eight semi-idealized patient geometries, for a total of 80 scenarios. Measured outcomes included mixing zone location and cerebral blood flow (CBF). RESULTS: Depending on patient anatomy, we found that a VA ECMO support ranging between 67-97% of a patient's ideal cardiac output was needed to perfuse the brain. In some cases, VA ECMO flows exceeding 90% of the patient's ideal cardiac output are needed for adequate cerebral perfusion. CONCLUSIONS: Individual patient anatomy markedly affects mixing zone location and cerebral perfusion in VA ECMO. Future fluid simulations of VA ECMO physiology should incorporate varied patient sizes and geometries in order to best provide insights toward reducing neurologic injury and improved outcomes in this patient population.

2.
Comput Math Appl ; 132: 145-160, 2023 Feb 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38222470

RESUMO

Three constitutive laws, that is the Skalak, neo-Hookean and Yeoh laws, commonly employed for describing the erythrocyte membrane mechanics are theoretically analyzed and numerically investigated to assess their accuracy for capturing erythrocyte deformation characteristics and morphology. Particular emphasis is given to the nonlinear deformation regime, where it is known that the discrepancies between constitutive laws are most prominent. Hence, the experiments of optical tweezers and micropipette aspiration are considered here, for which relationships between the individual shear elastic moduli of the constitutive laws can also be established through analysis of the tension-deformation relationship. All constitutive laws were found to adequately predict the axial and transverse deformations of a red blood cell subjected to stretching with optical tweezers for a constant shear elastic modulus value. As opposed to Skalak law, the neo-Hookean and Yeoh laws replicated the erythrocyte membrane folding, that has been experimentally observed, with the trade-off of sustaining significant area variations. For the micropipette aspiration, the suction pressure-aspiration length relationship could be excellently predicted for a fixed shear elastic modulus value only when Yeoh law was considered. Importantly, the neo-Hookean and Yeoh laws reproduced the membrane wrinkling at suction pressures close to those experimentally measured. None of the constitutive laws suffered from membrane area compressibility in the micropipette aspiration case.

3.
IEEE Trans Parallel Distrib Syst ; 33(3): 642-653, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35498162

RESUMO

A propagation pattern for the moment representation of the regularized lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) in three dimensions is presented. Using effectively lossless compression, the simulation state is stored as a set of moments of the lattice Boltzmann distribution function, instead of the distribution function itself. An efficient cache-aware propagation pattern for this moment representation has the effect of substantially reducing both the storage and memory bandwidth required for LBM simulations. This paper extends recent work with the moment representation by expanding the performance analysis on central processing unit (CPU) architectures, considering how boundary conditions are implemented, and demonstrating the effectiveness of the moment representation on a graphics processing unit (GPU) architecture.

4.
Comput Sci Eng ; 22(6): 37-47, 2020 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35939281

RESUMO

A patient-specific airflow simulation was developed to help address the pressing need for an expansion of the ventilator capacity in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The computational model provides guidance regarding how to split a ventilator between two or more patients with differing respiratory physiologies. To address the need for fast deployment and identification of optimal patient-specific tuning, there was a need to simulate hundreds of millions of different clinically relevant parameter combinations in a short time. This task, driven by the dire circumstances, presented unique computational and research challenges. We present here the guiding principles and lessons learned as to how a large-scale and robust cloud instance was designed and deployed within 24 hours and 800 000 compute hours were utilized in a 72-hour period. We discuss the design choices to enable a quick turnaround of the model, execute the simulation, and create an intuitive and interactive interface.

5.
Neurosurg Focus ; 47(1): E13, 2019 07 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31261117

RESUMO

The growth of cerebral aneurysms is linked to local hemodynamic conditions, but the driving mechanisms of the growth are poorly understood. The goal of this study was to examine the association between intraaneurysmal hemodynamic features and areas of aneurysm growth, to present the key hemodynamic parameters essential for an accurate prediction of the growth, and to gain a deeper understanding of the underlying mechanisms. Patient-specific images of a growing cerebral aneurysm in 3 different growth stages acquired over a period of 40 months were segmented and reconstructed. A unique aspect of this patient-specific case study was that while one side of the aneurysm stayed stable, the other side continued to grow. This unique case enabled the authors to examine their aims in the same patient with parent and daughter arteries under the same inlet flow conditions. Pulsatile flow in the aneurysm models was simulated using computational fluid dynamics and was validated with in vitro experiments using particle image velocimetry measurements. The authors' detailed analysis of intrasaccular hemodynamics linked the growing regions of aneurysms to flow instabilities and complex vortex structures. Extremely low velocities were observed at or around the center of the unstable vortex structure, which matched well with the growing regions of the studied cerebral aneurysm. Furthermore, the authors observed that the aneurysm wall regions with a growth greater than 0.5 mm coincided with wall regions of lower (< 0.5 Pa) time-averaged wall shear stress (TAWSS), lower instantaneous (< 0.5 Pa) wall shear stress (WSS), and high (> 0.1) oscillatory shear index (OSI). To determine which set of parameters can best identify growing and nongrowing aneurysms, the authors performed statistical analysis for consecutive stages of the growing CA. The results demonstrated that the combination of TAWSS and the distance from the center of the vortical structure has the highest sensitivity and positive predictive value, and relatively high specificity and negative predictive value. These findings suggest that an unstable, recirculating flow structure within the aneurysm sac created in the region adjacent to the aneurysm wall with low TAWSS may be introduced as an accurate criterion to explain the hemodynamic conditions predisposing the aneurysm to growth. The authors' findings are based on one patient's data set, but the study lays out the justification for future large-scale verification. The authors' findings can assist clinicians in differentiating stable and growing aneurysms during preinterventional planning.


Assuntos
Hemodinâmica , Aneurisma Intracraniano/patologia , Algoritmos , Velocidade do Fluxo Sanguíneo , Angiografia Cerebral , Artérias Cerebrais/diagnóstico por imagem , Artérias Cerebrais/patologia , Simulação por Computador , Progressão da Doença , Feminino , Humanos , Hidrodinâmica , Aneurisma Intracraniano/diagnóstico por imagem , Aneurisma Intracraniano/fisiopatologia , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Valor Preditivo dos Testes , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X
6.
ArXiv ; 2024 Feb 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38410654

RESUMO

Continuously measured arterial blood velocity can provide insight into physiological parameters and potential disease states. The efficient and effective description of the temporal profiles of arterial velocity is crucial for both clinical practice and research. We propose a pipeline to identify the minimum number of points of interest to adequately describe a velocity profile of the left coronary artery. This pipeline employs a novel operation that "stretches" a baseline waveform to quantify the utility of a point in fitting other waveforms. Our study introduces a comprehensive pipeline specifically designed to identify the minimal yet crucial number of points needed to accurately represent the velocity profile of the left coronary artery. Additionally, the only location-dependent portion of this pipeline is the first step, choosing all of the possible points of interest. Hence, this work is broadly applicable to other waveforms. This versatility paves the way for a novel non-frequency domain method that can enhance the analysis of physiological waveforms. Such advancements have potential implications in both research and clinical treatment of various diseases, underscoring the broader applicability and impact.

7.
Cardiovasc Eng Technol ; 15(4): 431-442, 2024 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38459240

RESUMO

PURPOSR: This study created 3D CFD models of the Norwood procedure for hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) using standard angiography and echocardiogram data to investigate the impact of shunt characteristics on pulmonary artery (PA) hemodynamics. Leveraging routine clinical data offers advantages such as availability and cost-effectiveness without subjecting patients to additional invasive procedures. METHODS: Patient-specific geometries of the intrathoracic arteries of two Norwood patients were generated from biplane cineangiograms. "Virtual surgery" was then performed to simulate the hemodynamics of alternative PA shunt configurations, including shunt type (modified Blalock-Thomas-Taussig shunt (mBTTS) vs. right ventricle-to-pulmonary artery shunt (RVPAS)), shunt diameter, and pulmonary artery anastomosis angle. Left-right pulmonary flow differential, Qp/Qs, time-averaged wall shear stress (TAWSS), and oscillatory shear index (OSI) were evaluated. RESULTS: There was strong agreement between clinically measured data and CFD model output throughout the patient-specific models. Geometries with a RVPAS tended toward more balanced left-right pulmonary flow, lower Qp/Qs, and greater TAWSS and OSI than models with a mBTTS. For both shunt types, larger shunts resulted in a higher Qp/Qs and higher TAWSS, with minimal effect on OSI. Low TAWSS areas correlated with regions of low flow and changing the PA-shunt anastomosis angle to face toward low TAWSS regions increased TAWSS. CONCLUSION: Excellent correlation between clinically measured and CFD model data shows that 3D CFD models of HLHS Norwood can be developed using standard angiography and echocardiographic data. The CFD analysis also revealed consistent changes in PA TAWSS, flow differential, and OSI as a function of shunt characteristics.


Assuntos
Hemodinâmica , Síndrome do Coração Esquerdo Hipoplásico , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Procedimentos de Norwood , Artéria Pulmonar , Estresse Mecânico , Artéria Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Artéria Pulmonar/cirurgia , Artéria Pulmonar/diagnóstico por imagem , Humanos , Síndrome do Coração Esquerdo Hipoplásico/cirurgia , Síndrome do Coração Esquerdo Hipoplásico/fisiopatologia , Síndrome do Coração Esquerdo Hipoplásico/diagnóstico por imagem , Circulação Pulmonar , Modelagem Computacional Específica para o Paciente , Cineangiografia , Velocidade do Fluxo Sanguíneo , Recém-Nascido , Resultado do Tratamento
8.
J Am Heart Assoc ; 13(13): e029941, 2024 Jul 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38904250

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Computational fluid dynamics can compute fractional flow reserve (FFR) accurately. However, existing models are limited by either the intravascular hemodynamic phenomarkers that can be captured or the fidelity of geometries that can be modeled. METHODS AND RESULTS: This study aimed to validate a new coronary angiography-based FFR framework, FFRHARVEY, and examine intravascular hemodynamics to identify new biomarkers that could augment FFR in discerning unrevascularized patients requiring intervention. A 2-center cohort was used to examine diagnostic performance of FFRHARVEY compared with reference wire-based FFR (FFRINVASIVE). Additional biomarkers, longitudinal vorticity, velocity, and wall shear stress, were evaluated for their ability to augment FFR and indicate major adverse cardiac events. A total of 160 patients with 166 lesions were investigated. FFRHARVEY was compared with FFRINVASIVE by investigators blinded to the invasive FFR results with a per-stenosis area under the curve of 0.91, positive predictive value of 90.2%, negative predictive value of 89.6%, sensitivity of 79.3%, and specificity of 95.4%. The percentage ofdiscrepancy for continuous values of FFR was 6.63%. We identified a hemodynamic phenomarker, longitudinal vorticity, as a metric indicative of major adverse cardiac events in unrevascularized gray-zone cases. CONCLUSIONS: FFRHARVEY had high performance (area under the curve: 0.91, positive predictive value: 90.2%, negative predictive value: 89.6%) compared with FFRINVASIVE. The proposed framework provides a robust and accurate way to compute a complete set of intravascular phenomarkers, in which longitudinal vorticity was specifically shown to differentiate vessels predisposed to major adverse cardiac events.


Assuntos
Angiografia Coronária , Reserva Fracionada de Fluxo Miocárdico , Valor Preditivo dos Testes , Humanos , Reserva Fracionada de Fluxo Miocárdico/fisiologia , Masculino , Feminino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Idoso , Doença da Artéria Coronariana/fisiopatologia , Doença da Artéria Coronariana/diagnóstico , Doença da Artéria Coronariana/diagnóstico por imagem , Estenose Coronária/fisiopatologia , Estenose Coronária/diagnóstico por imagem , Estenose Coronária/diagnóstico , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Vasos Coronários/fisiopatologia , Vasos Coronários/diagnóstico por imagem , Hemodinâmica/fisiologia
9.
Cardiovasc Eng Technol ; 14(2): 194-203, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36385239

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Computational models of flow in patient-derived arterial geometries have become a key paradigm of biomedical research. These fluid models are often challenging to visualize due to high spatial heterogeneity and visual complexity. Virtual immersive environments can offer advantageous visualization of spatially heterogeneous and complex systems. However, as different VR devices offer varying levels of immersion, there remains a crucial lack of understanding regarding what level of immersion is best suited for interactions with patient-specific flow models. METHODS: We conducted a quantitative user evaluation with multiple VR devices testing an important use of hemodynamic simulations-analysis of surface parameters within complex patient-specific geometries. This task was compared for the semi-immersive zSpace 3D monitor and the fully immersive HTC Vive system. RESULTS: The semi-immersive device was more accurate than the fully immersive device. The two devices showed similar results for task duration and performance (accuracy/duration). The accuracy of the semi-immersive device was also higher for arterial geometries of greater complexity and branching. CONCLUSION: This assessment demonstrates that the level of immersion plays a significant role in the accuracy of assessing arterial flow models. We found that the semi-immersive VR device was a generally optimal choice for arterial visualization.


Assuntos
Hemodinâmica , Imersão , Humanos
10.
Cell Mol Bioeng ; 16(5-6): 497-507, 2023 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38099216

RESUMO

Background: Current research on the biophysics of circulating tumor cells often overlooks the heterogeneity of cell populations, focusing instead on average cellular properties. This study aims to address the gap by considering the diversity of cell biophysical characteristics and their implications on cancer spread. Methods: We utilized computer simulations to assess the influence of variations in cell size and membrane elasticity on the behavior of cells within fluid environments. The study controlled cell and fluid properties to systematically investigate the transport of tumor cells through a simulated network of branching channels. Results: The simulations revealed that even minor differences in cellular properties, such as slight changes in cell radius or shear elastic modulus, lead to significant changes in the fluid conditions that cells experience, including velocity and wall shear stress (p < 0.001). Conclusion: The findings underscore the importance of considering cell heterogeneity in biophysical studies and suggest that small variations in cellular characteristics can profoundly impact the dynamics of tumor cell circulation. This has potential implications for understanding the mechanisms of cancer metastasis and the development of therapeutic strategies.

11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38939612

RESUMO

Tracking hemodynamic responses to treatment and stimuli over long periods remains a grand challenge. Moving from established single-heartbeat technology to longitudinal profiles would require continuous data describing how the patient's state evolves, new methods to extend the temporal domain over which flow is sampled, and high-throughput computing resources. While personalized digital twins can accurately measure 3D hemodynamics over several heartbeats, state-of-the-art methods would require hundreds of years of wallclock time on leadership scale systems to simulate one day of activity. To address these challenges, we propose a cloud-based, parallel-in-time framework leveraging continuous data from wearable devices to capture the first 3D patient-specific, longitudinal hemodynamic maps. We demonstrate the validity of our method by establishing ground truth data for 750 beats and comparing the results. Our cloud-based framework is based on an initial fixed set of simulations to enable the wearable-informed creation of personalized longitudinal hemodynamic maps.

12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38125771

RESUMO

Simulations of cancer cell transport require accurately modeling mm-scale and longer trajectories through a circulatory system containing trillions of deformable red blood cells, whose intercellular interactions require submicron fidelity. Using a hybrid CPU-GPU approach, we extend the advanced physics refinement (APR) method to couple a finely-resolved region of explicitly-modeled red blood cells to a coarsely-resolved bulk fluid domain. We further develop algorithms that: capture the dynamics at the interface of differing viscosities, maintain hematocrit within the cell-filled volume, and move the finely-resolved region and encapsulated cells while tracking an individual cancer cell. Comparison to a fully-resolved fluid-structure interaction model is presented for verification. Finally, we use the advanced APR method to simulate cancer cell transport over a mm-scale distance while maintaining a local region of RBCs, using a fraction of the computational power required to run a fully-resolved model.

13.
Biomech Model Mechanobiol ; 21(4): 1079-1098, 2022 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35507242

RESUMO

Cell transport is governed by the interaction of fluid dynamic forces and biochemical factors such as adhesion receptor expression and concentration. Although the effect of endothelial receptor density is well understood, it is not clear how the spacing and local spatial distribution of receptors affect cell adhesion in three-dimensional microvessels. To elucidate the effect of vessel shape on cell trajectory and the arrangement of endothelial receptors on cell adhesion, we employed a three-dimensional deformable cell model that incorporates microscale interactions between the cell and the endothelium. Computational cellular adhesion models are systematically altered to assess the influence of receptor spacing. We demonstrate that the patterns of receptors on the vessel walls are a key factor guiding cell movement. In straight microvessels, we show a relationship between cell velocity and the spatial distribution of adhesive endothelial receptors, with larger receptor patches producing lower translational velocities. The joint effect of the complex vessel topology seen in microvessel shapes such as curved and bifurcated vessels when compared to straight tubes is explored with results which showed the spatial distribution of receptors affecting cell trajectory. Our findings here represent demonstration of the previously undescribed relationship between receptor pattern and geometry that guides cellular movement in complex microenvironments.


Assuntos
Adesivos , Microvasos , Adesivos/metabolismo , Adesão Celular , Endotélio , Eritrócitos , Microvasos/metabolismo
14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38204519

RESUMO

Cell adhesion plays a critical role in processes ranging from leukocyte migration to cancer cell transport during metastasis. Adhesive cell interactions can occur over large distances in microvessel networks with cells traveling over distances much greater than the length scale of their own diameter. Therefore, biologically relevant investigations necessitate efficient modeling of large field-of-view domains, but current models are limited by simulating such geometries at the sub-micron scale required to model adhesive interactions which greatly increases the computational requirements for even small domain sizes. In this study we introduce a hybrid scheme reliant on both on-node and distributed parallelism to accelerate a fully deformable adhesive dynamics cell model. This scheme leads to performant system usage of modern supercomputers which use a many-core per-node architecture. On-node acceleration is augmented by a combination of spatial data structures and algorithmic changes to lessen the need for atomic operations. This deformable adhesive cell model accelerated with hybrid parallelization allows us to bridge the gap between high-resolution cell models which can capture the sub-micron adhesive interactions between the cell and its microenvironment, and large-scale fluid-structure interaction (FSI) models which can track cells over considerable distances. By integrating the sub-micron simulation environment into a distributed FSI simulation we enable the study of previously unfeasible research questions involving numerous adhesive cells in microvessel networks such as cancer cell transport through the microcirculation.

15.
Front Med Technol ; 4: 1034801, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36561284

RESUMO

Background: Personalized hemodynamic models can accurately compute fractional flow reserve (FFR) from coronary angiograms and clinical measurements (FFR baseline ), but obtaining patient-specific data could be challenging and sometimes not feasible. Understanding which measurements need to be patient-tuned vs. patient-generalized would inform models with minimal inputs that could expedite data collection and simulation pipelines. Aims: To determine the minimum set of patient-specific inputs to compute FFR using invasive measurement of FFR (FFR invasive ) as gold standard. Materials and Methods: Personalized coronary geometries ( N = 50 ) were derived from patient coronary angiograms. A computational fluid dynamics framework, FFR baseline , was parameterized with patient-specific inputs: coronary geometry, stenosis geometry, mean arterial pressure, cardiac output, heart rate, hematocrit, and distal pressure location. FFR baseline was validated against FFR invasive and used as the baseline to elucidate the impact of uncertainty on personalized inputs through global uncertainty analysis. FFR streamlined was created by only incorporating the most sensitive inputs and FFR semi-streamlined additionally included patient-specific distal location. Results: FFR baseline was validated against FFR invasive via correlation ( r = 0.714 , p < 0.001 ), agreement (mean difference: 0.01 ± 0.09 ), and diagnostic performance (sensitivity: 89.5%, specificity: 93.6%, PPV: 89.5%, NPV: 93.6%, AUC: 0.95). FFR semi-streamlined provided identical diagnostic performance with FFR baseline . Compared to FFR baseline vs. FFR invasive , FFR streamlined vs. FFR invasive had decreased correlation ( r = 0.64 , p < 0.001 ), improved agreement (mean difference: 0.01 ± 0.08 ), and comparable diagnostic performance (sensitivity: 79.0%, specificity: 90.3%, PPV: 83.3%, NPV: 87.5%, AUC: 0.90). Conclusion: Streamlined models could match the diagnostic performance of the baseline with a full gamut of patient-specific measurements. Capturing coronary hemodynamics depended most on accurate geometry reconstruction and cardiac output measurement.

16.
J Biomech ; 132: 110919, 2022 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35063831

RESUMO

The anomalous aortic origin of coronary arteries (AAOCA) is a congenital disease that can lead to sudden cardiac death (SCD) during strenuous physical activity. Despite AAOCA being the second leading cause of SCD among young athletes, the mechanism behind sudden cardiac death remains mostly unknown. Computational fluid dynamics provides a powerful tool for studying how pathologic anatomy can affect different hemodynamic states. The present study investigates the effect of AAOCA on patient hemodynamics. We performed patient-specific hemodynamic simulations of interarterial AAOCA at baseline and in the exercise state using our massively parallel flow solver. Additionally, we investigate how surgical correction via coronary unroofing impacts patient blood flow. Results show that patient-specific AAOCA models exhibited higher interarterial time-averaged wall shear stress (TAWSS) values compared to the control patients. The oscillatory shear index had no impact on AAOCA. Finally, the coronary unroofing procedure normalized the elevated TAWSS by decreasing TAWSS in the postoperative patient. The present study provides a proof of concept for the potential hemodynamic factors underlying coronary ischemia in AAOCA during exercise state.


Assuntos
Anomalias dos Vasos Coronários , Vasos Coronários , Aorta , Anomalias dos Vasos Coronários/cirurgia , Hemodinâmica , Humanos , Modelagem Computacional Específica para o Paciente
17.
Proc IEEE Int Conf Clust Comput ; 2022: 230-242, 2022 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38125675

RESUMO

The ability to track simulated cancer cells through the circulatory system, important for developing a mechanistic understanding of metastatic spread, pushes the limits of today's supercomputers by requiring the simulation of large fluid volumes at cellular-scale resolution. To overcome this challenge, we introduce a new adaptive physics refinement (APR) method that captures cellular-scale interaction across large domains and leverages a hybrid CPU-GPU approach to maximize performance. Through algorithmic advances that integrate multi-physics and multi-resolution models, we establish a finely resolved window with explicitly modeled cells coupled to a coarsely resolved bulk fluid domain. In this work we present multiple validations of the APR framework by comparing against fully resolved fluid-structure interaction methods and employ techniques, such as latency hiding and maximizing memory bandwidth, to effectively utilize heterogeneous node architectures. Collectively, these computational developments and performance optimizations provide a robust and scalable framework to enable system-level simulations of cancer cell transport.

18.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 15232, 2021 07 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34315934

RESUMO

In order to understand the effect of cellular level features on the transport of circulating cancer cells in the microcirculation, there has been an increasing reliance on high-resolution in silico models. Accurate simulation of cancer cells flowing with blood cells requires resolving cellular-scale interactions in 3D, which is a significant computational undertaking warranting a cancer cell model that is both computationally efficient yet sufficiently complex to capture relevant behavior. Given that the characteristics of metastatic spread are known to depend on cancer type, it is crucial to account for mechanistic behavior representative of a specific cancer's cells. To address this gap, in the present work we develop and validate a means by which an efficient and popular membrane model-based approach can be used to simulate deformable cancer cells and reproduce experimental data from specific cell lines. Here, cells are modeled using the immersed boundary method (IBM) within a lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) fluid solver, and the finite element method (FEM) is used to model cell membrane resistance to deformation. Through detailed comparisons with experiments, we (i) validate this model to represent cancer cells undergoing large deformation, (ii) outline a systematic approach to parameterize different cell lines to optimally fit experimental data over a range of deformations, and (iii) provide new insight into nucleated vs. non-nucleated cell models and their ability to match experiments. While many works have used the membrane-model based method employed here to model generic cancer cells, no quantitative comparisons with experiments exist in the literature for specific cell lines undergoing large deformation. Here, we describe a phenomenological, data-driven approach that can not only yield good agreement for large deformations, but explicitly detail how it can be used to represent different cancer cell lines. This model is readily incorporated into cell-resolved hemodynamic transport simulations, and thus offers significant potential to complement experiments towards providing new insights into various aspects of cancer progression.


Assuntos
Microcirculação , Modelos Biológicos , Neoplasias/irrigação sanguínea , Algoritmos , Humanos , Neoplasias/patologia
19.
Biomech Model Mechanobiol ; 20(4): 1209-1230, 2021 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33765196

RESUMO

The transport of cancerous cells through the microcirculation during metastatic spread encompasses several interdependent steps that are not fully understood. Computational models which resolve the cellular-scale dynamics of complex microcirculatory flows offer considerable potential to yield needed insights into the spread of cancer as a result of the level of detail that can be captured. In recent years, in silico methods have been developed that can accurately and efficiently model the circulatory flows of cancer and other biological cells. These computational methods are capable of resolving detailed fluid flow fields which transport cells through tortuous physiological geometries, as well as the deformation and interactions between cells, cell-to-endothelium interactions, and tumor cell aggregates, all of which play important roles in metastatic spread. Such models can provide a powerful complement to experimental works, and a promising approach to recapitulating the endogenous setting while maintaining control over parameters such as shear rate, cell deformability, and the strength of adhesive binding to better understand tumor cell transport. In this review, we present an overview of computational models that have been developed for modeling cancer cells in the microcirculation, including insights they have provided into cell transport phenomena.


Assuntos
Transporte Biológico , Endotélio/metabolismo , Microcirculação , Neoplasias/patologia , Animais , Adesão Celular , Simulação por Computador , Endotélio Vascular/fisiologia , Análise de Elementos Finitos , Humanos , Camundongos , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Metástase Neoplásica , Células Neoplásicas Circulantes , Fenótipo
20.
Comput Biol Med ; 129: 104155, 2021 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33333365

RESUMO

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.


Assuntos
Oxigenação por Membrana Extracorpórea , Aorta , Artérias Cerebrais , Oxigenação por Membrana Extracorpórea/efeitos adversos , Coração , Hemodinâmica , Humanos
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