Drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosis

We study the problem of drug delivery in a catheterized artery in the presence of atherosclerosis. The problem is modeled in the context of a two-phase flow system which consists of red blood cells and blood plasma. The coupled differential equations for fluid (plasma) and particles (red cells) are...

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Main Authors: Saulo Orizaga, Daniel N. Riahi, José R. Soto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-08-01
Series:Results in Applied Mathematics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590037420300273
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spelling doaj-1678ca56227e4e6f931fb9794aaf280c2020-11-25T04:00:56ZengElsevierResults in Applied Mathematics2590-03742020-08-017100117Drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosisSaulo Orizaga0Daniel N. Riahi1José R. Soto2Department of Mathematics, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, United States of America; Corresponding author.Department of Mathematics, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Edinburg, TX 78539, United States of AmericaSchool of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, United States of AmericaWe study the problem of drug delivery in a catheterized artery in the presence of atherosclerosis. The problem is modeled in the context of a two-phase flow system which consists of red blood cells and blood plasma. The coupled differential equations for fluid (plasma) and particles (red cells) are solved for the relevant quantities in the reasonable limits. The drug delivery problem is modeled with a partial differential equation that is developed in terms of the drug concentration, blood plasma velocity, hematocrit value and the diffusion coefficient of the drug/fluid. A conservative-implicit finite difference scheme is develop in order to numerically solve the drug concentration model with an atherosclerosis region. We find that the evolution of the drug concentration varies in magnitude depending on the roles played by the convection and diffusion effects. For the cases where the diffusion coefficient is not too small, then convection effect is not strong enough and drug was delivered mostly in the central part of the blood flow region and could not reach effectively the atherosclerosis zone. However, for sufficiently small values of the diffusion coefficient, the convective effect dominates over the diffusion effect and the drug was delivered effectively over the blood flow region and on the atherosclerosis zone.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590037420300273Blood flowDrug deliveryAtherosclerosisConservative finite-difference
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saulo Orizaga
Daniel N. Riahi
José R. Soto
spellingShingle Saulo Orizaga
Daniel N. Riahi
José R. Soto
Drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosis
Results in Applied Mathematics
Blood flow
Drug delivery
Atherosclerosis
Conservative finite-difference
author_facet Saulo Orizaga
Daniel N. Riahi
José R. Soto
author_sort Saulo Orizaga
title Drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosis
title_short Drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosis
title_full Drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosis
title_fullStr Drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosis
title_full_unstemmed Drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosis
title_sort drug delivery in catheterized arterial blood flow with atherosclerosis
publisher Elsevier
series Results in Applied Mathematics
issn 2590-0374
publishDate 2020-08-01
description We study the problem of drug delivery in a catheterized artery in the presence of atherosclerosis. The problem is modeled in the context of a two-phase flow system which consists of red blood cells and blood plasma. The coupled differential equations for fluid (plasma) and particles (red cells) are solved for the relevant quantities in the reasonable limits. The drug delivery problem is modeled with a partial differential equation that is developed in terms of the drug concentration, blood plasma velocity, hematocrit value and the diffusion coefficient of the drug/fluid. A conservative-implicit finite difference scheme is develop in order to numerically solve the drug concentration model with an atherosclerosis region. We find that the evolution of the drug concentration varies in magnitude depending on the roles played by the convection and diffusion effects. For the cases where the diffusion coefficient is not too small, then convection effect is not strong enough and drug was delivered mostly in the central part of the blood flow region and could not reach effectively the atherosclerosis zone. However, for sufficiently small values of the diffusion coefficient, the convective effect dominates over the diffusion effect and the drug was delivered effectively over the blood flow region and on the atherosclerosis zone.
topic Blood flow
Drug delivery
Atherosclerosis
Conservative finite-difference
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590037420300273
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AT danielnriahi drugdeliveryincatheterizedarterialbloodflowwithatherosclerosis
AT josersoto drugdeliveryincatheterizedarterialbloodflowwithatherosclerosis
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