Author:
Akash Mohammad Mehedi Hasan,Chakraborty Nilotpal,Mohammad Jiyan,Reindl Katie,Basu Saikat
Abstract
AbstractDense fibrous extracellular constitution of solid tumors exerts high resistance to diffusive transport into it; additionally, the scarcity of blood and lymphatic flows hinders convection. The complexity of fluidic transport mechanisms in such tumor environments still presents open questions with translational end goals. For example, clinical diagnosis and targeted drug delivery platforms for such dense tumors can ideally benefit from a quantitative framework on plasma uptake into the tumor. In this study, we present a computational model for physical parameters that may influence blood percolation and penetration into simple biomimetic solid tumor geometry. The model implements three-phase viscous-laminar transient simulation to mimic the transport physics inside a tumor-adhering blood vessel and measures the constituent volume fractions of the three considered phases, viz. plasma, RBCs (red blood cells, also known as “erythrocytes”), and WBCs (white blood cells, also known as “leukocytes”) at three different flow times, while simultaneously recording the plasma pressure and velocity at the entry point to the tumor’s extracellular space. Subsequently, to quantify plasma perfusion within the tumor zone, we proposed a reduced-order two-dimensional transport model for the tumor entry zone and its extracellular space for three different fenestra diameters: 0.1, 0.3, and 0.5 µm; the simulations were two-phase viscous-laminar transient. The findings support the hypothesis that plasma percolation into the tumor is proportional to the leakiness modulated by the size of fenestra openings, and the rate of percolation decays with the diffusion distance.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Nuclear and High Energy Physics,Mechanical Engineering,Nuclear Energy and Engineering,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Reference48 articles.
1. Afolabi, E. A., Lee, J. G. M. 2014. An Eulerian-Eulerian CFD simulation of air-water flow in a pipe separator. The Journal of Computational Multiphase, 6: 133–149.
2. Akash, M. M. H., Chakraborty, N., Basu, S. 2021. A multiphase tracking of perfusion through in silico dense tumor domain. In: Proceedings of the 74th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics Meeting Abstracts, N01.00061.
3. Anderson, T. B., Jackson, R. 1967. Fluid mechanical description of fluidized beds. Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Fundamentals, 6: 527–539.
4. Attinger, E. O. 1964. Elements of Theoretical Hydrodynamics. New York: McGraw-Hill, 15–76.
5. Baskurt, O. K., Meiselman, H. J. 2003. Blood rheology and hemodynamics. Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis, 29: 435–450.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献