Abstract

Background and aimsThe crossed limbs stent graft technique is regularly employed to treat abdominal aortic aneurysm patients with unfavorable aneurysm necks or widely splayed common iliac arteries. This article numerically evaluates the hemodynamic performance of the crossed limbs strategy by analyzing numerical simulations and conducting experiments using two series of idealized bifurcated stent grafts with different cross angles and cross positions.ResultsResults demonstrated that the absolute helicity at outlets decreased with increased cross angles and increased with decreased cross positions. The time-averaged wall shear stress remained approximately unchanged, whereas the oscillating shear index and relative resident time decreased slightly when the cross angle increased and cross position decreased in iliac grafts. Additionally, both numerical and in vitro experimental results indicate the displacement force acting on the stent graft gradually increased as cross angles increased and cross positions decreased. Results further indicated that strip areas with a high oscillating shear index and high relative resident time, which may be vulnerable to thrombosis formation, exist along the outer surface of the iliac artery grafts.ConclusionGiven this information, the optimal crossed limbs configuration may contain a small cross angle and low cross position; however, low cross positions may increase the risk of migration.

Highlights

  • Background and aimsThe crossed limbs stent graft technique is regularly employed to treat abdominal aortic aneurysm patients with unfavorable aneurysm necks or widely splayed common iliac arteries

  • The streamlines gradually twisted along the iliac grafts, with double helical flows observed at the left iliac graft outlet

  • The results obtained in this study indicate that the intensity of helical flow strength produced in the crossed limbs strategy decreased with increasing cross angles and decreasing cross position ratios

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Summary

Introduction

The crossed limbs stent graft technique is regularly employed to treat abdominal aortic aneurysm patients with unfavorable aneurysm necks or widely splayed common iliac arteries. The conventional surgery procedure employs proximal neck deployment (with an attached ipsilateral iliac limb) first, followed by contralateral iliac limb deployment. This conventional EVAR procedure becomes more complex and difficult when abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) patients have an unfavorable anatomy such as widely splayed common iliac arteries or severe aneurysm necks [3, 4]. The crossed limbs strategy generates helical flows within the iliac artery grafts [5, 6], resembling patterns typically observed in the human aorta [8, 9]. The crossed limbs strategy is believed to be advantageous for AAA repair treatment

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