Abstract

We present an experimental and computational investigation of time-varying flow in an idealized fully occluded 45° distal end-to-side anastomosis. Two geometric configurations are assessed, one where the centerlines of host and bypass vessels lie within a plane, and one where the bypass vessel is deformed out of the plane of symmetry, respectively, termed planar and non-planar. Flow experiments were conducted by magnetic resonance imaging in rigid wall models and computations were performed using a high order spectral/ hp algorithm. Results indicate a significant change in the spatial distribution of wall shear stress and a reduction of the time-averaged peak wall shear stress magnitude by 10% in the non-planar model as compared to the planar configuration. In the planar geometry the stagnation point follows a straight-line path along the host artery bed with a path length of 0.8 diameters. By contrast in the non-planar case the stagnation point oscillates about a center that is located off the symmetry plane intersection with the host artery bed wall, and follows a parabolic path with a 0.7 diameter longitudinal and 0.5 diameter transverse excursion. A definition of the oscillatory shear index (OSI) is introduced that varies between 0 and 0.5 and that accounts for a continuous range of wall shear stress vector angles. In both models, regions of elevated oscillatory shear were spatially associated with regions of separated or oscillating stagnation point flow. The mean oscillatory shear magnitude (considering sites where OSI>0.1) in the non-planar geometry was reduced by 22% as compared to the planar configuration. These changes in the dynamic behavior of the stagnation point and the oscillatory shear distribution introduced by out-of-plane graft curvature may influence the localization of vessel wall sites exposed to physiologically unfavorable flow conditions.

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