A one‐dimensional computational model for blood flow in an elastic blood vessel with a rigid catheter

Author:

Pradhan Aseem Milind1ORCID,Mut Fernando1ORCID,Cebral Juan Raul1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bioengineering Department George Mason University Fairfax Virginia USA

Abstract

AbstractStrokes are one of the leading causes of death in the United States. Stroke treatment involves removal or dissolution of the obstruction (usually a clot) in the blocked artery by catheter insertion. A computer simulation to systematically plan such patient‐specific treatments needs a network of about 105 blood vessels including collaterals. The existing computational fluid dynamic (CFD) solvers are not employed for stroke treatment planning as they are incapable of providing solutions for such big arterial trees in a reasonable amount of time. This work presents a novel one‐dimensional mathematical formulation for blood flow modeling in an elastic blood vessel with a centrally placed rigid catheter. The governing equations are first‐order hyperbolic partial differential equations, and the hypergeometric function needs to be computed to obtain the characteristic system of these hyperbolic equations. We employed the Discontinuous Galerkin method to solve the hyperbolic system and validated the implementation by comparing it against a well‐established 3D CFD solver using idealized vessels and a realistic truncated arterial network. The results showed clinically insignificant differences in steady flow cases, with overall variations between 1D and 3D models remaining below 10%. Additionally, the solver accurately captured wave reflection phenomena at domain discontinuities in unsteady cases. A primary advantage of this model over 3D solvers is its ease in obtaining a discretized geometry of complex vasculatures with multiple arterial branches. Thus, the 1D computational model offers good accuracy and applicability in simulating complex vasculatures, demonstrating promising potential for investigating patient‐specific endovascular interventions in strokes.

Funder

Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President, George Mason University

Publisher

Wiley

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