Impact of stalling events on microcirculatory hemodynamics in the aged brain

Author:

Jamshidi Mohammad1,Ventimiglia Thomas1,Sudres Patrice1,Zhang Cong2,Lesage Frédéric2ORCID,Rooney William3,Schwartz Daniel3,Linninger Andreas A.14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

2. Department of Electrical Engineering, Polytechnique Montréal Montreal Canada

3. Advanced Imaging Research Center Oregon Health & Science University Portland Oregon USA

4. Department of Neurosurgery University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe role of cerebral microvasculature in cognitive dysfunction can be investigated by identifying the impact of blood flow on cortical tissue oxygenation. In this paper, the impact of capillary stalls on microcirculatory characteristics such as flow and hematocrit (Ht) in the cortical angioarchitecture is studied.MethodsUsing a deterministic mathematical model to simulate blood flow in a realistic mouse cortex, hemodynamics parameters, including pressure, flow, vessel diameter‐adjustable hematocrit, and transit time are calculated as a function of stalling events.ResultsUsing a non‐linear plasma skimming model, it is observed that Ht increases in the penetrating arteries from the pial vessels as a function of cortical depth. The incidence of stalling on Ht distribution along the blood network vessels shows reduction of RBCs around the tissue near occlusion sites and decreased Ht concentration downstream from the blockage points. Moreover, upstream of the occlusion, there is a noticeable increase of the Ht, leading to larger flow resistance due to higher blood viscosity. We predicted marked changes in transit time behavior due to stalls which match trends observed in mice in vivo.ConclusionsThese changes to blood cell quantity and quality may be implicated in the development of Alzheimer's disease and contribute to the course of the illness.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Molecular Biology,Physiology

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