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156343 |
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|a Pop, S.R.
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|a Richardson, Giles
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|a Waters, S.L.
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|a Jensen, O.E.
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|a Shock formation and non-linear dispersion in a microvascular capillary network
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|c 2007.
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|z Get fulltext
|u https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/156343/1/PUBLISHED.pdf
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|a Temporal and spatial fluctuations are a common feature of blood flow in microvascular networks. Among many possible causes, previous authors have suggested that the non-linear rheological properties of capillary blood flow (notably the Fåhræus effect, the Fåhræus-Lindqvist effect and the phase-separation effect at bifurcations) may be sufficient to generate temporal fluctuations even in very simple networks. We have simulated blood flow driven by a fixed pressure drop through a simple arcade network using coupled hyperbolic partial differential equations (PDEs) that incorporate well-established empirical descriptions of these rheological effects, accounting in particular for spatially varying haematocrit distributions; we solved the PDE system using a characteristic-based method. Our computations indicate that, under physiologically realistic conditions, there is a unique steady flow in an arcade network which is linearly stable and that plasma skimming suppresses the oscillatory decay of perturbations. In addition, we find that non-linear perturbations to haematocrit distributions can develop shocks via the Fåhræus effect, providing a novel mechanism for non-linear dispersion in microvascular networks.
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|a Article
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