Abstract

It was shown previously that ultrasonic scattering from whole blood varies during a flow cycle under pulsatile flow both in vitro and in vivo. It has been postulated that this cyclic variation may be associated with the dynamics of red cell aggregation because the shearing force acting on the red cell aggregates across the lumen is a function of time during a flow cycle. In all studies, the local shear rate variation as a function of time is unknown. The effect of shear rate on the red cell aggregation and, thus, on ultrasonic scattering from blood can only be merely speculated. One solution to this problem is to estimate the shear rate in a flow conduit by finite element analysis (FEA). An FEA computational fluid dynamics (CFD) tool was used to calculate local shear rate in a series of experiments in which ultrasonic backscattering from porcine whole blood under pulsatile flow was measured as a function of hematocrit and shear rate intravascularly with a 10-MHz catheter-mounted transducer in a mock flow loop. The results show that, at 20 beats per min (BPM), the magnitudes of the cyclic variation for hematocrits at 30, 40, and 50% were approximately 4 dB. However, at 60 BPM, the magnitude of cyclic variation was found to be minimal. The results also confirm previous findings that the amplitude and the timing of the peak of ultrasonic backscattering from porcine whole blood under pulsatile flow during a flow cycle are dependent upon the shear rate and hematocrit in a complicated way.

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