scholarly journals Intimal Thickness Is not Associated With Wall Shear Stress Patterns in the Human Right Coronary Artery

2004 ◽  
Vol 24 (12) ◽  
pp. 2408-2413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anil K. Joshi ◽  
Richard L. Leask ◽  
Jerry G. Myers ◽  
Matadial Ojha ◽  
Jagdish Butany ◽  
...  
1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (4) ◽  
pp. 370-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kirpalani ◽  
H. Park ◽  
J. Butany ◽  
K. W. Johnston ◽  
M. Ojha

Blood flow dynamics in the human right coronary artery have not been adequately quantified despite the clinical significance of coronary atherosclerosis. In this study, a technique was developed to construct a rigid flow model from a cast of a human right coronary artery. A laser photochromic method was used to characterize the velocity and wall shear stress patterns. The flow conditions include steady flow at Reynolds numbers of 500 and 1000 as well as unsteady flow with Womersley parameter and peak Reynolds number of 1.82 and 750, respectively. Characterization of the three-dimensional geometry of the artery revealed that the largest spatial variation in curvature occurred within the almost branch-free proximal region, with the greatest curvature existing along the acute margin of the heart. In the proximal segment, high shear stresses were observed on the outer wall and lower, but not negative, stresses along the inner wall. Low shear stress on the inner wall may be related to the preferential localization of atherosclerosis in the proximal segment of the right coronary artery. However, it is possible that the large difference between the outer and inner wall shear stresses may also be involved.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerry G. Myers ◽  
M. Ojha ◽  
K. Wayne Johnston ◽  
C. Ross Ethier

Abstract Formation of atherosclerotic plaque in the human right coronary artery (RCA) has, in part, been linked to local hemodynamic factors (Ojha et al., 2000). Thus, there is considerable motivation to accurately characterize hemodynamic patterns in the RCA. Patient-specific geometric characteristics, such as curvature and arterial calibre, have been shown to significantly affect velocity and wall shear stress (WSS) patterns within the RCA trunk (Myers et al., 2000). However it is unclear how flow into arterial branches influences these hemodynamic patterns. In investigating this factor, we computed velocity and WSS distributions in a realistic model of a human right coronary artery (RCA) that included four branches.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dehong Zeng ◽  
Evangelos Boutsianis ◽  
Marc Ammann ◽  
Kevin Boomsma ◽  
Simon Wildermuth ◽  
...  

A computational model incorporating physiological motion and uniform transient wall deformation of a branchless right coronary artery (RCA) was developed to assess the influence of artery compliance on wall shear stress (WSS). Arterial geometry and deformation were derived from modern medical imaging techniques, whereas the blood flow was solved numerically employing a moving-grid approach using a well-validated in-house finite element code. The simulation results indicate that artery compliance affects the WSS in the RCA heterogeneously, with the distal region mostly experiencing these effects. Under physiological inflow conditions, coronary compliance contributed to phase changes in the WSS time history, without affecting the temporal gradient of the local WSS nor the bounds of the WSS magnitude. Compliance does not cause considerable changes to the topology of WSS vector patterns nor to the localization of WSS minima along the RCA. We conclude that compliance is not an important factor affecting local hemodynamics in the proximal region of the RCA while the influence of compliance in the distal region needs to be evaluated in conjunction with the outflow to the myocardium through the major branches of the RCA.


Author(s):  
Nanfeng Sun ◽  
Ryo Torii ◽  
Nigel B. Wood ◽  
Andrew Wright ◽  
Alun D. Hughes ◽  
...  

Low wall shear stress (WSS) is commonly implicated in endothelial dysfunction and atherogenesis. The accumulation of macromolecules is also considered as an important factor contributing to the development of atherosclerosis. In the present study a fluid-wall model, incorporating shear-dependent endothelial transport properties, was developed and used to study the transport of albumin from blood to and within the wall in a realistic human right coronary artery (RCA). Numerical simulations were performed at both steady and pulsatile flow conditions, and results were compared to evaluate the effect of flow pulsatility.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mongkol Kaewbumrung ◽  
Somsak Orankitjaroen ◽  
Pichit Boonkrong ◽  
Buraskorn Nuntadilok ◽  
Benchawan Wiwatanapataphee

A mathematical model of dispersed bioparticle-blood flow through the stenosed coronary artery under the pulsatile boundary conditions is proposed. Blood is assumed to be an incompressible non-Newtonian fluid and its flow is considered as turbulence described by the Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations. Bioparticles are assumed to be spherical shape with the same density as blood, and their translation and rotational motions are governed by Newtonian equations. Impact of particle movement on the blood velocity, the pressure distribution, and the wall shear stress distribution in three different severity degrees of stenosis including 25%, 50%, and 75% are investigated through the numerical simulation using ANSYS 18.2. Increasing degree of stenosis severity results in higher values of the pressure drop and wall shear stresses. The higher level of bioparticle motion directly varies with the pressure drop and wall shear stress. The area of coronary artery with higher density of bioparticles also presents the higher wall shear stress.


Author(s):  
Pedro D. Pedroso ◽  
Andreas S. Anayiotos ◽  
Brad L. Hershey ◽  
Evangelos Eleftheriou ◽  
William L. Holman

Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the leading cause of death in the world today. According to the American Heart Association 529,659 people in 1999 died as a result of CAD [1]. Starting in the 1960’s, surgeons have used Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) techniques in order to reestablish blood flow to the heart. Today, the procedure remains the same, using autologous grafts, such as the mammary artery and the saphenous vein. An unresolved problem, is that a significant number of CABGs reocclude months to years postoperatively. In the case of Saphenous Vein Grafts (SVGs) typically 50% of these bypasses are totally occluded months to years after the procedure, the remaining half being more than 50% occluded [2]. The re-occlusion of CABGs is due to a process labeled intimal hyperplasia (IH). Investigators have shown that IH, believed by some to be a remodeling process, occurs at branch sites, regions of curvature, and anastomotic junctions [3,4]. At these sites there are low residence times, slow secondary structures, disturbed flow, and areas of recirculation, therefore the onset of IH is believed to be hemodynamically linked. Most recently, floor IH has been attributed to four variables: time averaged wall shear stress (WSS), oscillating shear index (OSI), spatial wall shear stress gradients (WSSG), and temporal WSSG [5]. Adverse values of these parameters, in the case of SVGs, are believed to be caused by impedance mismatch at the anastomosis site. Over time this characteristic causes a bulge at the sinus. Such a morphology additionally contributes to disturbed flows which tend to propagate down the CABG and are believed to play a major role in the development of IH and the eventual failure of the graft.


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