Laminar and Transitional Flow disturbances in Diseased and Stented Arteries

Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are the number one causes of death in the world. According to the world Health Organization (WHO) 17.5 million people died from cardiovascular disease in 2005, representing 30 % of all global deaths . Of these deaths, 7.6 million were due to heart attacks and 5.7 millio...

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Main Author: Karri, Satyaprakash Babu
Other Authors: Biomedical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28880
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09062009-204633/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-288802020-09-26T05:30:47Z Laminar and Transitional Flow disturbances in Diseased and Stented Arteries Karri, Satyaprakash Babu Biomedical Engineering Telionis, Demetri P. Vlachos, Pavlos P. Prabhu, Santosh Ragab, Saad A. Tafti, Danesh K. Wall shear stresses Radial Basis Function Transition Turbulence DPIV Stenosis Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are the number one causes of death in the world. According to the world Health Organization (WHO) 17.5 million people died from cardiovascular disease in 2005, representing 30 % of all global deaths . Of these deaths, 7.6 million were due to heart attacks and 5.7 million due to stroke. If current trends are allowed to continue, by 2015 an estimated 20 million people will die annually from cardiovascular disease. The trends are similar in the United States where on an average 1 person dies every 37 seconds due to CVD. In 2008 an estimated 770,000 Americans will experience a new heart attack (coronary stenosis) and 600,000 will experience a first stroke. Although the exact causes of cardiovascular disease are not well understood, hemodynamics has been long thought to play a primary role in the progression of cardiovascular disease and stroke. There is strong evidence linking the fluid mechanical forces to the transduction mechanisms that trigger biochemical response leading to atherosclerosis or plaque formation. It is hypothesized that the emergence of abnormal fluid mechanical stresses which dictate the cell mechanotransduction mechanisms and lead to disease progression is dependent on the geometry and compliance of arteries, and pulsatility of blood flow. Understanding of such hemodynamic regulation in relation to atherosclerosis is of significant clinical importance in the prediction and progression of heart disease as well as design of prosthetic devices such as stents. The current work will systematically study the effects of compliance and complex geometry and the resulting fluid mechanical forces. The objective of this work is to understand the relationship of fluid mechanics and disease conditions using both experimental and computational methods where (a) Compliance effects are studied in idealized stenosed coronary and peripheral arteries using Digital Particle Image Velocimetry (DPIV), (b) Complex geometric effects of stented arteries with emphasis on its design parameters is investigated using CFD, Also (c) a novel method to improve the accuracy of velocity gradient estimation in the presence of noisy flow fields such as in DPIV where noise is inherently present is introduced with the objective to improve accuracy in the estimation of WSS, which are of paramount hemodynamic importance. The broad impact of the current work extends to the understanding of fundamental physics associated with arterial disease progression which can lead to better design of prosthetic devices, and also to better disease diagnostics. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:15:57Z 2014-03-14T20:15:57Z 2009-08-26 2009-09-06 2009-09-30 2009-09-30 Dissertation etd-09062009-204633 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28880 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09062009-204633/ masterPhD3.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Wall shear stresses
Radial Basis Function
Transition
Turbulence
DPIV
Stenosis
spellingShingle Wall shear stresses
Radial Basis Function
Transition
Turbulence
DPIV
Stenosis
Karri, Satyaprakash Babu
Laminar and Transitional Flow disturbances in Diseased and Stented Arteries
description Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are the number one causes of death in the world. According to the world Health Organization (WHO) 17.5 million people died from cardiovascular disease in 2005, representing 30 % of all global deaths . Of these deaths, 7.6 million were due to heart attacks and 5.7 million due to stroke. If current trends are allowed to continue, by 2015 an estimated 20 million people will die annually from cardiovascular disease. The trends are similar in the United States where on an average 1 person dies every 37 seconds due to CVD. In 2008 an estimated 770,000 Americans will experience a new heart attack (coronary stenosis) and 600,000 will experience a first stroke. Although the exact causes of cardiovascular disease are not well understood, hemodynamics has been long thought to play a primary role in the progression of cardiovascular disease and stroke. There is strong evidence linking the fluid mechanical forces to the transduction mechanisms that trigger biochemical response leading to atherosclerosis or plaque formation. It is hypothesized that the emergence of abnormal fluid mechanical stresses which dictate the cell mechanotransduction mechanisms and lead to disease progression is dependent on the geometry and compliance of arteries, and pulsatility of blood flow. Understanding of such hemodynamic regulation in relation to atherosclerosis is of significant clinical importance in the prediction and progression of heart disease as well as design of prosthetic devices such as stents. The current work will systematically study the effects of compliance and complex geometry and the resulting fluid mechanical forces. The objective of this work is to understand the relationship of fluid mechanics and disease conditions using both experimental and computational methods where (a) Compliance effects are studied in idealized stenosed coronary and peripheral arteries using Digital Particle Image Velocimetry (DPIV), (b) Complex geometric effects of stented arteries with emphasis on its design parameters is investigated using CFD, Also (c) a novel method to improve the accuracy of velocity gradient estimation in the presence of noisy flow fields such as in DPIV where noise is inherently present is introduced with the objective to improve accuracy in the estimation of WSS, which are of paramount hemodynamic importance. The broad impact of the current work extends to the understanding of fundamental physics associated with arterial disease progression which can lead to better design of prosthetic devices, and also to better disease diagnostics. === Ph. D.
author2 Biomedical Engineering
author_facet Biomedical Engineering
Karri, Satyaprakash Babu
author Karri, Satyaprakash Babu
author_sort Karri, Satyaprakash Babu
title Laminar and Transitional Flow disturbances in Diseased and Stented Arteries
title_short Laminar and Transitional Flow disturbances in Diseased and Stented Arteries
title_full Laminar and Transitional Flow disturbances in Diseased and Stented Arteries
title_fullStr Laminar and Transitional Flow disturbances in Diseased and Stented Arteries
title_full_unstemmed Laminar and Transitional Flow disturbances in Diseased and Stented Arteries
title_sort laminar and transitional flow disturbances in diseased and stented arteries
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28880
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09062009-204633/
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