Stress Load and Ascending Aortic Aneurysms: An Observational, Longitudinal, Single-Center Study Using Computational Fluid Dynamics

Author:

de Azevedo Fabiula Schwartz12ORCID,Almeida Gabriela de Castro3ORCID,Alvares de Azevedo Bruno3ORCID,Ibanez Aguilar Ivan Fernney3ORCID,Azevedo Bruno Nieckele3ORCID,Teixeira Pedro Soares4ORCID,Camargo Gabriel Cordeiro2ORCID,Correia Marcelo Goulart2ORCID,Nieckele Angela Ourivio3ORCID,Oliveira Glaucia Maria Moraes1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro 21941-913, RJ, Brazil

2. Research and Teaching Department, Instituto Nacional de Cardiologia, Rio de Janeiro 22240-006, RJ, Brazil

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro 22451-900, RJ, Brazil

4. Fit Center—Clínica de Performance Humana, Niterói 24220-331, RJ, Brazil

Abstract

Ascending aortic aneurysm (AAoA) is a silent disease with high mortality; however, the factors associated with a worse prognosis are not completely understood. The objective of this observational, longitudinal, single-center study was to identify the hemodynamic patterns and their influence on AAoA growth using computational fluid dynamics (CFD), focusing on the effects of geometrical variations on aortic hemodynamics. Personalized anatomic models were obtained from angiotomography scans of 30 patients in two different years (with intervals of one to three years between them), of which 16 (53%) showed aneurysm growth (defined as an increase in the ascending aorta volume by 5% or more). Numerically determined velocity and pressure fields were compared with the outcome of aneurysm growth. Through a statistical analysis, hemodynamic characteristics were found to be associated with aneurysm growth: average and maximum high pressure (superior to 100 Pa); average and maximum high wall shear stress (superior to 7 Pa) combined with high pressure (>100 Pa); and stress load over time (maximum pressure multiplied by the time interval between the exams). This study provides insights into a worse prognosis of this serious disease and may collaborate for the expansion of knowledge about mechanobiology in the progression of AAoA.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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