Numerical Simulation of Blood Flow through Tortuous and Stenotic Coronary Arteries using Multiphase Approach
Date
2019
Authors
Buradi, Abdulrajak
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
The cardiovascular pathologies such as atherosclerosis and thrombosis are vascular
diseases involving fluid-dynamical, mechanical, and biological factors. In past few
years, the study of numerical blood flow dynamic studies within anatomically
complex arteries has garnered great interest among cardiologists, clinicians and
biomedical engineers. The evolution in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and high
computing performance have helped us to identify the probable arterial regions for the
presence of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) and to understand and predict how this
disease may develop. The presence of tortuosity and stenosis in coronary artery (CA)
disturbs the local wall shear stress (WSS) which is considered as an influential
hemodynamic descriptor (HD) for the growth of atherosclerotic sites. Different WSS
based HDs have been formulated over the years to understand the hemodynamic flow
conditions as predictors of endothelial wall dysfunction which is precursor for all
CVDs. In general, these HDs have been numerically determined using ‘single phase’
approach. In single phase approach, the flow-dependent cell transport and their
interactions with the carrier fluid are generally ignored by considering blood as a
single phase fluid.
In the present work, numerical investigation of two phase blood flow through stenotic
and tortuous left coronary arteries (LCAs) was performed using Eulerian multiphase
mixture theory model for the modeling of blood flow in multiphase mixture model,
plasma is modeled as continuous liquid phase and Red Blood Cells (RBCs) as the
dispersed phase. The model of interest is first validated and the results of multiphase
and single phase modeling of blood were compared with experiment results in order
to evaluate the performance of multiphase mixture model for blood flow. The
multiphase mixture theory approach performed better than single phase approach and
showed good agreement with the experimental results. With the confidence gained,
the mixture theory multiphase approach is then used for pulsatile blood flow
simulations through four idealized CA geometries having varying degrees of stenosis
(DOS) severities viz., 30, 50, 70, and 85% diameter reduction stenosis and through
several tortuous artery models by varying three morphological indices namely,curvature radius (CR), distance between two bends (DBB) and the angle of bend
(AoB). The geometric models of both stenosed and tortuous idealized LCAs were
designed in the commercial program SolidWorks and the CFD simulations were
carried out with the use of commercial program Ansys Fluent (V14.5).
The aim of this study was to understand the effect of stenosis and tortuosity in
coronary artery hemodynamics. This interaction between artery geometry and flow is
examined in two ways; initially by investigating the influence of stenosis severity and
tortuosity parameters on various WSS based hemodynamic descriptors and then on
RBC concentration. In addition, a detailed hemodynamic study was performed to
determine the influence of the stenosis severity and tortuosity on flow and vice versa.
In large blood vessels (millimeter to centimeter size) such as in coronary and carotid
arteries, the RBCs shear induced migration affects the transport of oxygen to the
arterial endothelial cells (ECs). Hence, in this work we also investigated the locations
where hydrodynamic diffusion of RBCs occurs and the effects of stenosis severity on
shear induced diffusion (SID) of RBCs, concentration distribution and WSS. For the
first time, multiphase mixture theory approach along with modified Phillips shearinduced diffusive flux model and coupled with Quemada non-Newtonian viscosity
model has been applied to numerically simulate the RBCs macroscopic behavior in
four different degrees of stenosis (DOS) geometries viz. 30, 50, 70, and 85%. The
capability to describe the blood flow through a stenosed and tortuous artery for
varying degrees of stenosis (DOS) severity and tortuosity morphological indices
combined with imaging modalities provides the medical practitioners the ability to
diagnose the severity of disease with high accuracy in its early stages and the
opportunity of treatment before the ailment becomes fatal.
Description
Keywords
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Multiphase blood flow, Stenosis, Wall shear stress, Coronary artery, Oscillatory shear index, Atherosclerosis, Red blood cell, Shear-induced diffusion