Physically Informed Deep Learning Technique for Estimating Blood Flow Parameters in Four-Vessel Junction after the Fontan Procedure

Author:

Isaev Alexander1,Dobroserdova Tatiana1ORCID,Danilov Alexander123ORCID,Simakov Sergey123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Marchuk Institute of Numerical Mathematics of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 119991 Moscow, Russia

2. Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, 141701 Dolgoprudny, Russia

3. Institute of Computer Sciences and Mathematical Modelling, Sechenov University, 119992 Moscow, Russia

Abstract

This study introduces an innovative approach leveraging physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) for the efficient computation of blood flows at the boundaries of a four-vessel junction formed by a Fontan procedure. The methodology incorporates a 3D mesh generation technique based on the parameterization of the junction’s geometry, coupled with an advanced physically regularized neural network architecture. Synthetic datasets are generated through stationary 3D Navier–Stokes simulations within immobile boundaries, offering a precise alternative to resource-intensive computations. A comparative analysis of standard grid sampling and Latin hypercube sampling data generation methods is conducted, resulting in datasets comprising 1.1×104 and 5×103 samples, respectively. The following two families of feed-forward neural networks (FFNNs) are then compared: the conventional “black-box” approach using mean squared error (MSE) and a physically informed FFNN employing a physically regularized loss function (PRLF), incorporating mass conservation law. The study demonstrates that combining PRLF with Latin hypercube sampling enables the rapid minimization of relative error (RE) when using a smaller dataset, achieving a relative error value of 6% on the test set. This approach offers a viable alternative to resource-intensive simulations, showcasing potential applications in patient-specific 1D network models of hemodynamics.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference27 articles.

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