Abstract

BackgroundThe management and prognosis of aortic dissection (AD) is often challenging and the use of personalised computational models is being explored as a tool to improve clinical outcome. Including vessel wall motion in such simulations can provide more realistic and potentially accurate results, but requires significant additional computational resources, as well as expertise. With clinical translation as the final aim, trade-offs between complexity, speed and accuracy are inevitable. The present study explores whether modelling wall motion is worth the additional expense in the case of AD, by carrying out fluid-structure interaction (FSI) simulations based on a sample patient case.MethodsPatient-specific anatomical details were extracted from computed tomography images to provide the fluid domain, from which the vessel wall was extrapolated. Two-way fluid-structure interaction simulations were performed, with coupled Windkessel boundary conditions and hyperelastic wall properties. The blood was modelled using the Carreau-Yasuda viscosity model and turbulence was accounted for via a shear stress transport model. A simulation without wall motion (rigid wall) was carried out for comparison purposes.ResultsThe displacement of the vessel wall was comparable to reports from imaging studies in terms of intimal flap motion and contraction of the true lumen. Analysis of the haemodynamics around the proximal and distal false lumen in the FSI model showed complex flow structures caused by the expansion and contraction of the vessel wall. These flow patterns led to significantly different predictions of wall shear stress, particularly its oscillatory component, which were not captured by the rigid wall model.ConclusionsThrough comparison with imaging data, the results of the present study indicate that the fluid-structure interaction methodology employed herein is appropriate for simulations of aortic dissection. Regions of high wall shear stress were not significantly altered by the wall motion, however, certain collocated regions of low and oscillatory wall shear stress which may be critical for disease progression were only identified in the FSI simulation. We conclude that, if patient-tailored simulations of aortic dissection are to be used as an interventional planning tool, then the additional complexity, expertise and computational expense required to model wall motion is indeed justified.

Highlights

  • The management and prognosis of aortic dissection (AD) is often challenging and the use of personalised computational models is being explored as a tool to improve clinical outcome

  • The present study investigated whether the additional complexity, and critically additional time, required to perform patient-tailored fluid-structure interaction (FSI) simulations when modelling AD as a tool for interventional planning is justified

  • The present study comprises the most advanced model of haemodynamics in a dissected aorta reported in the literature to date, with coupled dynamic boundary conditions, non-Newtonian viscosity, turbulence and wall motion all accounted for

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Summary

Introduction

The management and prognosis of aortic dissection (AD) is often challenging and the use of personalised computational models is being explored as a tool to improve clinical outcome. Once an FL is formed, the disease has high mortality rates [1], and if untreated only 40% of patients suffering from type-B dissections (those involving only the descending aorta) will live longer than a month [2]. Such dissections are often treated medically (for example by pharmacologically lowering blood pressure with beta blockers [3]), but surgical interventions are necessary in the presence of complications such as malperfusion, downstream organ ischemia, severe hypertension, excessive enlargement of false lumen, leak and rupture [4,5]. Endovascular interventions reduce the risk of complications, but their long term risk-factors are not yet clear [6]

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