Article Open Access March 30, 2023

Pulsatile Blood Flow Simulation for Subject-Specific Geometry of a Human Aortic Arch

1
Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, M. S. Ramaiah University of Applied Sciences, Bangalore, India (Present address: Wipro GE Healthcare, Bangalore, India)
2
Department of Aerospace Engineering, M. S. Ramaiah University of Applied Sciences, Bangalore, India
3
Department of Radiology, M. S. Ramaiah Medical College and Hospitals, Bangalore, India
4
Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, M. S. Ramaiah University of Applied Sciences, Bangalore, India (Present address: Relecura Technologies, Bangalore, India)
Page(s): 1-19
Received
January 16, 2023
Revised
March 09, 2023
Accepted
March 29, 2023
Published
March 30, 2023
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright: Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Scientific Publications
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APA Style
Shariff, Z. , Shariff, Z. Sivapragasam, M. , Sivapragasam, M. Prabhu, V. M. D. , & Prabhu, V. M. D. (2023). Pulsatile Blood Flow Simulation for Subject-Specific Geometry of a Human Aortic Arch. Global Journal of Medical Case Reports, 3(1), 1-19. https://doi.org/10.31586/ijmebac.2023.606
ACS Style
Shariff, Z. ; Shariff, Z. Sivapragasam, M. ; Sivapragasam, M. Prabhu, V. M. D. ; Prabhu, V. M. D. Pulsatile Blood Flow Simulation for Subject-Specific Geometry of a Human Aortic Arch. Global Journal of Medical Case Reports 2023 3(1), 1-19. https://doi.org/10.31586/ijmebac.2023.606
Chicago/Turabian Style
Shariff, Zeba, Zeba Shariff. M. Sivapragasam, M. Sivapragasam. Vinay M. D. Prabhu, and Vinay M. D. Prabhu. 2023. "Pulsatile Blood Flow Simulation for Subject-Specific Geometry of a Human Aortic Arch". Global Journal of Medical Case Reports 3, no. 1: 1-19. https://doi.org/10.31586/ijmebac.2023.606
AMA Style
Shariff Z, Shariff ZSivapragasam M, Sivapragasam MPrabhu VMD, Prabhu VMD. Pulsatile Blood Flow Simulation for Subject-Specific Geometry of a Human Aortic Arch. Global Journal of Medical Case Reports. 2023; 3(1):1-19. https://doi.org/10.31586/ijmebac.2023.606
@Article{gjmcr606,
AUTHOR = {Shariff, Zeba and Sivapragasam, M. and Prabhu, Vinay M. D. and Hariharan, R.},
TITLE = {Pulsatile Blood Flow Simulation for Subject-Specific Geometry of a Human Aortic Arch},
JOURNAL = {Global Journal of Medical Case Reports},
VOLUME = {3},
YEAR = {2023},
NUMBER = {1},
PAGES = {1-19},
URL = {https://www.scipublications.com/journal/index.php/IJMEBAC/article/view/606},
ISSN = {2770-8691},
DOI = {10.31586/ijmebac.2023.606},
ABSTRACT = {Pulsatile blood flow in a subject-specific human aortic arch and its major branches is studied computationally for a peak Reynolds number of 1553 and a Womersley number of 22.74. The aortic geometry is constructed from the CT-scan images of a subject. The aorta has out-of-plane curvature and significant area variation along the flow direction. A physiologically representative pulsatile velocity waveform is applied as boundary condition at the inlet of the aorta. The primary velocity profiles are skewed towards the inner wall of the ascending aorta during the entire cardiac cycle. In the decelerating phase, reverse flow is noted along the inner wall and the magnitude of maximum velocity is about 50 % of the peak flow condition. Flow separation is observed in the inner wall of the ascending aorta during the decelerating and reverse flow phases of the cardiac cycle. In the accelerating phase, however, flow separation does not occur. The major observation of the present work is the existence of complex and asymmetrical vortical flow structures which are not observed either in simple curved pipes or in idealized aortic arch computational studies. The relative strength of the secondary flow with respect to the primary flow is quantified by means of Relative Secondary Kinetic Energy whose highest value is evaluated to be 1.202 occurring near the entrance of the right carotid artery during the maximum reverse flow condition. High values of wall shear stress is observed at distal of the left and right subclavian arteries, the bifurcation of brachiocephalic artery between right subclavian artery and right carotid artery, and proximal inner wall of descending aorta during the cardiac cycle. The wall shear stress at the bifurcations of the branches are low and oscillatory and generally correlates with the preferential sites for atherosclerosis. The flow structures on the aorta wall are explicitly highlighted by the limiting streamlines. The application of limiting streamlines to clearly elucidate the complex on-wall flow structures is one of the key contributions of the present study. During the decelerating and reverse flow phases several critical points are observed on the aortic wall. These complex flow structures vanish during the accelerating phase. The observations made in the present study will be helpful in creating accurate and clinically useful computational models.},
}
%0 Journal Article
%A Shariff, Zeba
%A Sivapragasam, M.
%A Prabhu, Vinay M. D.
%A Hariharan, R.
%D 2023
%J Global Journal of Medical Case Reports

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AU  - Shariff, Zeba
AU  - Sivapragasam, M.
AU  - Prabhu, Vinay M. D.
AU  - Hariharan, R.
TI  - Pulsatile Blood Flow Simulation for Subject-Specific Geometry of a Human Aortic Arch
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AB  - Pulsatile blood flow in a subject-specific human aortic arch and its major branches is studied computationally for a peak Reynolds number of 1553 and a Womersley number of 22.74. The aortic geometry is constructed from the CT-scan images of a subject. The aorta has out-of-plane curvature and significant area variation along the flow direction. A physiologically representative pulsatile velocity waveform is applied as boundary condition at the inlet of the aorta. The primary velocity profiles are skewed towards the inner wall of the ascending aorta during the entire cardiac cycle. In the decelerating phase, reverse flow is noted along the inner wall and the magnitude of maximum velocity is about 50 % of the peak flow condition. Flow separation is observed in the inner wall of the ascending aorta during the decelerating and reverse flow phases of the cardiac cycle. In the accelerating phase, however, flow separation does not occur. The major observation of the present work is the existence of complex and asymmetrical vortical flow structures which are not observed either in simple curved pipes or in idealized aortic arch computational studies. The relative strength of the secondary flow with respect to the primary flow is quantified by means of Relative Secondary Kinetic Energy whose highest value is evaluated to be 1.202 occurring near the entrance of the right carotid artery during the maximum reverse flow condition. High values of wall shear stress is observed at distal of the left and right subclavian arteries, the bifurcation of brachiocephalic artery between right subclavian artery and right carotid artery, and proximal inner wall of descending aorta during the cardiac cycle. The wall shear stress at the bifurcations of the branches are low and oscillatory and generally correlates with the preferential sites for atherosclerosis. The flow structures on the aorta wall are explicitly highlighted by the limiting streamlines. The application of limiting streamlines to clearly elucidate the complex on-wall flow structures is one of the key contributions of the present study. During the decelerating and reverse flow phases several critical points are observed on the aortic wall. These complex flow structures vanish during the accelerating phase. The observations made in the present study will be helpful in creating accurate and clinically useful computational models.
DO  - Pulsatile Blood Flow Simulation for Subject-Specific Geometry of a Human Aortic Arch
TI  - 10.31586/ijmebac.2023.606
ER  -