Abstract

Since the stenosis geometry of some cardiovascular patients cannot be described by a vertically symmetric function throughout the stenosis, so it motivates us to study the blood flow through a vertically asymmetric stenosis. In addition, we compare the flow quantities in bothvertically symmetric and asymmetric stenoses. The vertically symmetric stenosis is explained by a vertically symmetric function such as an exponential function in bell shape and a cosine function in cosine shape. The vertically asymmetric stenosis is interpreted by a vertically asymmetric function such as the combination of two different stenosis shapes. Blood is treated as a non-Newtonian fluid which is represented in the power-law model. The finite difference scheme is used to solve governing equations for obtaining the flow quantities such as axial velocity, radial velocity, flow rate, resistance to flow, and skin friction. We investigated the way that the stenosis height, stenosis length, and non-Newtonian behavior affect the flow quantities through three various stenoses. The flow quantities in the bell shape and cosine shape of stenosis show significantly different behavior. Moreover, we found that the flow quantities in the single shape (bell shape or cosine shape) have the same behavior as the flow quantities in the combined shape in the first half part, but have a slightly different behavior in the last half part.

Highlights

  • Arterial stenosis is the major cause of many cardiovascular diseases such as myocardial infarction and cerebral stroke

  • Since the stenosis geometry of some cardiovascular patients cannot be described by a vertically symmetric stenosis, we propose to study the blood flow through a vertically asymmetric stenosis, for example, the combination of two different stenosis geometries

  • The equations that describe the geometry of the stenosis models in the bell shape and cosine shape are as expressed in Eq (1) and Eq (2), respectively [10, 16]

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Summary

Introduction

Arterial stenosis is the major cause of many cardiovascular diseases such as myocardial infarction and cerebral stroke. The study of blood flow through the stenosed artery is necessary. Owasit and Sriyab Advances in Difference Equations (2021) 2021:340 are various non-Newtonian models that are widely applied in representing blood flow behavior. Brooks found that power-law is highly effective in modeling the blood flow [12]. From the above literature reviews, the researchers studied only the blood flow through a vertically symmetric stenosis. We study the two-dimensional steady flow of the power-law fluid through vertically symmetric and asymmetric stenoses. The equations that describe the geometry of the stenosis models in the bell shape and cosine shape are as expressed in Eq (1) and Eq (2), respectively [10, 16].

Transformation of governing equations
Numerical procedure
Conclusion
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