Due to the anatomical complexity of the aortic arch for the development of stent-grafts for total repair, this region remains without a validated and routinely used endovascular option. In this work, a modular stent-graft for aneurysms that covers all aortic arch zones, proposed by us and previously structurally evaluated, was evaluated from the point of view of haemodynamics using fluid-structural numerical simulations. Blood was assumed to be non-Newtonian shear-thinning using the Carreau model, and the arterial wall was assumed to be anisotropic hyperelastic using the Holzapfel model. Nitinol and expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE-e) were used as materials for the stents and the graft, respectively. Nitinol was modelled as a superelastic material with shape memory by the Auricchio model, and PTFE-e was modelled as an isotropic linear elastic material. To validate the numerical model, a silicone model representative of the aneurysmal aorta was subjected to tests on an experimental bench representative of the circulatory system. The numerical results showed that the stent-graft restored flow behaviour, making it less oscillatory, but increasing the strain rate, turbulence kinetic energy, and viscosity compared to the pathological case. Taking the mean of the entire cycle, the increase in turbulence kinetic energy was 198.82% in the brachiocephalic trunk, 144.63% in the left common carotid artery and 284.03% in the left subclavian artery after stent-graft implantation. Based on wall shear stress parameters, it was possible to identify that the internal branches of the stent-graft and the stent-graft fixation sites in the artery were the most favourable regions for the deposition and accumulation of thrombus. In these regions, the oscillating shear index reached the maximum value of 0.5 and the time-averaged wall shear stress was close to zero, which led the relative residence time to reach values above 15 Pa-1. The stent-graft was able to preserve flow in the supra-aortic branches.
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