An On-Chip Microfluidic System for Reproducing Blood Pressure and Wall Shear Stress Waveforms in Human Common Carotid Arteries *

Author(s):  
Jing-Tong Na ◽  
Zhi-Guo Wang ◽  
Cheng Xiang ◽  
Yu Wang ◽  
Kai-Rong Qin
The Analyst ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingtong Na ◽  
Siyu Hu ◽  
Chundong Xue ◽  
Yanxia Wang ◽  
Kejie Chen ◽  
...  

To reproduce hemodynamic stress microenvironments of endothelial cells in vitro is of vital significance, by which one could exploit quantitative impact of hemodynamic stresses on endothelial function and seek innovative...


Circulation ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 94 (12) ◽  
pp. 3257-3262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agostino Gnasso ◽  
Claudio Carallo ◽  
Concetta Irace ◽  
Vitaliano Spagnuolo ◽  
Giuseppina De Novara ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Takeshi Tokunaga ◽  
Koji Mori ◽  
Hiroko Kadowaki ◽  
Takashi Saito

Abstract Cardiovascular disease that is one of Non-Communicable Disease accounts for about 25% of death in Japan. Prevention of arteriosclerosis that is a main cause of cardiovascular disease is important. Since an early lesions of arteriosclerosis progress as functional change of an endothelial cell that is uniformly distributed on the luminal surface of a blood vessel, an accurate evaluation of the endothelial cell function is important as prevention of the arteriosclerosis. Although Flow-Mediated Dilation (FMD) is widely used as a diagnosis of the endothelial cell function in clinic, it is an evaluation method that uses a static diameter of a blood vessel. Moreover, it isn’t possible to take into account individual difference of a wall shear stress on the endothelial cell. In previous study, it is found that an evoked hyperemic wall shear stress is a major correlate of %FMD. In order to accurately measure the endothelial cell function, it is necessary to simply assess the hyperemic shear stress during FMD. However, it is difficult to non-invasively measure the hyperemic shear stress on the endothelial cell in clinic. In this study, we focused on a blood pressure data that is obtained non-invasively and formulated a relationship between the pressure and a flow velocity based on the coupled wave theory. And we estimated a hyperemic shear stress by using a blood pressure data that is obtained by a tonometry method in experiment that simulate FMD. As a result of estimating the hyperemic shear stress, it reflected characteristics of blood flow in clinic. It may be necessary to consider the hyperemic pressure fluctuation that is waves including low frequency components. Moreover, the hyperemic pressure fluctuation should not be treated as a waveform that has individually different a static pressure in estimation of the hyperemic wall shear stress.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 441-441
Author(s):  
Yongzhi Qiu ◽  
Yumiko Sakurai ◽  
Wilbur A. Lam

Background: Treatment of thrombosis relies on prompt resolution of thrombi to restore blood flow to avoid ischemic injury. However, our understanding of the step-by-step process of how thromboses resolve remains limited due in large part to the lack of sufficient technologies. In addition, as thromboses require days to weeks to resolve, existing in vitro and in vivo systems cannot monitor this process, especially in the microvasculature where thrombi are difficult to visualize. As such, questions such as how do the cellular and biochemical composition of a clot change as it resolves and how do hemodynamics affect this process remain unanswered. This is particularly important in thromboinflammatory conditions such as autoimmune/inflammatory disorders in which patients are chronically at risk for microvascular thromboses but the pathophysiology and therefore optimal therapies remain unclear. Thus, a pressing need exists for an assay that assesses how microvascular thromboses resolve over long time scales, especially under thromboinflammatory conditions. We recently developed a microfluidic system that assesses microvascular events, including endothelial dysfunction and permeability, in response to proinflammatory signals over months (Qiu, Nature Biomed Eng. 2018). Here we leverage this system to monitor not only how microvascular thromboses form but, importantly, how they resolve over long timescales. Moreover, our system also enables the monitoring of how antithrombotic drugs and anticoagulants "work" in the context of existing inflammatory thrombi, which will provide insight into the pathophysiology as well as provide evidence for the use of different therapies. Results and Discussions: Our engineered microvasculature on chip recapitulates the biophysical microenvironment, such as microvessel size, geometry, wall shear stress, and shear gradients (Fig 1A-C), as well as the biological microenvironment, such as perfusion of whole blood, endothelial cells activated with inflammatory mediators, and vascular permeability, to assess how these factors interact during microvascular thrombi formation and resolution over long timescales (Fig 1D). As the entire "lifetime" of a clot is monitored with high spatiotemporal resolution (Fig 2), how the innate immunity, platelets, and coagulation cascade interact during microvascular thrombosis and resolution can be systematically studied. Interestingly, exposure of the microvasculature to TNF-α induces VWF multimers that deposit onto the inflamed endothelium at bifurcations of the smallest vessels, where wall shear stress gradients exist. The deposited VWF multimers then induce platelet aggregation in the bifurcation within minutes and is accompanied with gradual fibrin formation (Fig 1E-H). Neutrophils adhere to the inflamed endothelium at a relatively later stage primarily in areas with lower wall shear stress, aggregating with platelets and incorporating with the growing fibrin mesh. Interestingly, as thrombi start to resolve, platelets are mostly undetectable by 1 day post-thrombosis, while neutrophils and fibrin persist, occluding flow and preventing endothelial barrier function recovery. With this novel system, we are also able to monitor, for the first time, the effects of commonly used anticoagulants such as enoxaparin on clot resolution (Fig 2).When given as a prophylactic under thromboinflammatory conditions, enoxaparin prevents fibrin formation yet does not attenuate platelet-neutrophil aggregates, highlighting the critical role of interaction of platelets and neutrophils in microvascular occlusion. Surprisingly, enoxaparin also decreases endothelial dysfunction and restores barrier function, suggesting that a significant part of enoxaparin's antithrombotic effects may be endothelial in nature. While post-thrombosis overnight perfusion of the thrombolytic tPA expectedly results in complete fibrin degradation and restoration of flow, tPA also surprising induces endothelial barrier function. Conclusions: We have, for the first time, developed a perfusable vascularized thrombus resolution assay that enables the tracking of inflammatory thrombi over weeks and is ideal for studying antithrombotic drugs effects and how they may restore microvascular barrier function. Studies assessing the formation of microvascular emboli in this context are ongoing. Disclosures Lam: Sanguina, LLC: Equity Ownership; Sanguina, LLC: Equity Ownership.


2020 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuxi Jia ◽  
Kumaradevan Punithakumar ◽  
Michelle Noga ◽  
Arman Hemmati

Abstract The characteristics of blood flow in an abnormal pediatric aorta with an aortic coarctation and aortic arch narrowing are examined using direct numerical simulations and patient-specific boundary conditions. The blood flow simulations of a normal pediatric aorta are used for comparison to identify unique flow features resulting from the aorta geometrical anomalies. Despite flow similarities compared to the flow in normal aortic arch, the flow velocity decreases with an increase in pressure, wall shear stress, and vorticity around both anomalies. The presence of wall shear stresses in the trailing indentation region and aorta coarctation opposing the primary flow direction suggests that there exist recirculation zones in the aorta. The discrepancy in relative flowrates through the top and bottom of the aorta outlets, and the pressure drop across the coarctation, implies a high blood pressure in the upper body and a low blood pressure in the lower body. We propose using flow manipulators prior to the aortic arch and coarctation to lower the wall shear stress, while making the recirculation regions both smaller and weaker. The flow manipulators form a guide to divert and correct blood flow in critical regions of the aorta with anomalies.


Author(s):  
Biyue Liu ◽  
Jie Zheng ◽  
Richard Bach ◽  
Dalin Tang

There are two major hemodynamic stresses imposed at the blood-arterial wall interface by flowing blood: the wall shear stress (WSS) acting tangentially to the wall, and the wall pressure (WP) acting vertically to the wall. These forces influence the artery wall metabolism and correspond to the local modifications of artery wall thickness, composition, microarchitecture, and compliance [2]. The role of flow wall shear stress in atherosclerosis progression has been under intensive investigation [4], while the impact of local blood pressure on plaque progression has been under-studied.


2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo Zhang ◽  
Junyi Gu ◽  
Ming Qian ◽  
Lili Niu ◽  
Dhanjoo Ghista

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