Mathematical modelling of blood flows under the effects of body forces and magnetism on human body

Author(s):  
Ahmad Reza Haghighi ◽  
R.N. Pralhad
Author(s):  
John P. Abraham ◽  
Eph M. Sparrow ◽  
Ryan D. Lovik

The two major fluid flow systems of the human body, blood circulation and respiration, experience timewise pulsations. The variations of the fluid velocity during a pulsation/respiration cycle give rise to transitions in the flow regime during the course of a cycle. At the lowest fluid velocity encountered in the cycle, it is likely that the flow is laminar. As the velocity increases, the laminar regime may transist into a regime called transitional intermittent. Further increases in velocity may lead either to the fully developed intermittent regime or to the fully developed turbulent regime. Once the velocity attains a maximum and begins to decrease, the process of laminarization may be initiated wherein a succession of flow regimes may occur in opposite order to that described in the foregoing. The current capabilities of numerical simulation are limited to a single, user-specified flow regime, either laminar or turbulent. Consequently, the successive spontaneous flow regime transitions encountered in human-body fluid flows have been heretofore beyond the reach of biomedical investigators. Indeed, a thoroughgoing literature review failed to unearth any biomedical-oriented publications in which flow regime transitions have been taken into account. The present investigation is aimed at applying, for the first time, a flow transition model previously developed for steady flows to unsteady flows. The flows to be considered are timewise periodic, with amplitudes, periods, and mean values appropriate to blood flows in large arteries. Special consideration will be given to the magnitudes of the wall shear stresses that are created by such flows, since the accumulation of plaque depends decisively on the shear. The work will also take account of variations in the flow geometry.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bing Luo

In blood circulation (systemic circulation), the order of blood circulation is that arterial blood flows into capillaries only after venous blood refluxes. The human body controls the flow of arterial blood into capillaries by controlling the flow of venous blood. The refluxing power of venous blood changes with the rotation and revolution of the earth, and leads to changes in arterial blood obtained by cells, tissues and organs. If the refluxing power of venous blood of the lungs has a problem, the actual amount of blood obtained by the lungs will be less than the amount of blood distributed to the lungs by the human body (supplying the lungs with nutrients and oxygen they need), and what Pasteur called “the terrain” (There is a paragraph in Seasons of Life: “On his deathbed, Louis Pasteur, the founder of the germ theory of disease, allegedly said, ‘the germ is nothing, the terrain is everything’.”) will form in the lungs. The severity of problems induced by the intensity of venous reflux changes with time, leading to the variation of lung’s susceptibility to viral infections with time.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (3.3) ◽  
pp. 628
Author(s):  
Sisir Chettri ◽  
Akash Kumar Bhoi ◽  
Gyoo Soo Chae ◽  
Nilas Gurung ◽  
Ashis Sharma

Cardiovascular System, which consists of the heart, the systematic circulation and the pulmonary circulation is said to be the transport system for the human body. Modeling of cardiovascular system has become important for clinical researchers and for deeper understanding of blood circulation in the human body. This paper uses the lumped method which is also known as an electrical analogy for modeling and simulation of human cardiovascular system. A simplified complete lumped parameter model of the Human Cardiovascular System has been developed with real time implementation focusing mainly on blood flows. A resistor, an inductor and a capacitor are used to model every blood vessel, ventricles, atrium and set of all veins and capillaries. A pulse generating circuit is also modeled which acts as a power supply for the heart that controls the contraction of heart muscles.   


Author(s):  
Shulin Wen ◽  
Jingwei Feng ◽  
A. Krajewski ◽  
A. Ravaglioli

Hydroxyapatite bioceramics has attracted many material scientists as it is the main constituent of the bone and the teeth in human body. The synthesis of the bioceramics has been performed for years. Nowadays, the synthetic work is not only focused on the hydroapatite but also on the fluorapatite and chlorapatite bioceramics since later materials have also biological compatibility with human tissues; and they may also be very promising for clinic purpose. However, in comparison of the synthetic bioceramics with natural one on microstructure, a great differences were observed according to our previous results. We have investigated these differences further in this work since they are very important to appraise the synthetic bioceramics for their clinic application.The synthetic hydroxyapatite and chlorapatite were prepared according to A. Krajewski and A. Ravaglioli and their recent work. The briquettes from different hydroxyapatite or chlorapatite powders were fired in a laboratory furnace at the temperature of 900-1300°C. The samples of human enamel selected for the comparison with synthetic bioceramics were from Chinese adult teeth.


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