Arterial pulse wave propagation across stenoses and aneurysms: assessment of one-dimensional simulations against three-dimensional simulations and in vitro measurements

Author:

Jin Weiwei1ORCID,Alastruey Jordi12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, King’s College London, London, UK

2. World-Class Research Center ‘Digital Biodesign and Personalized Healthcare’, Sechenov University, Moscow, Russia

Abstract

One-dimensional (1-D) arterial blood flow modelling was tested in a series of idealized vascular geometries representing the abdominal aorta, common carotid and iliac arteries with different sizes of stenoses and/or aneurysms. Three-dimensional (3-D) modelling and in vitro measurements were used as ground truth to assess the accuracy of 1-D model pressure and flow waves. The 1-D and 3-D formulations shared identical boundary conditions and had equivalent vascular geometries and material properties. The parameters of an experimental set-up of the abdominal aorta for different aneurysm sizes were matched in corresponding 1-D models. Results show the ability of 1-D modelling to capture the main features of pressure and flow waves, pressure drop across the stenoses and energy dissipation across aneurysms observed in the 3-D and experimental models. Under physiological Reynolds numbers ( Re ), root mean square errors were smaller than 5.4% for pressure and 7.3% for the flow, for stenosis and aneurysm sizes of up to 85% and 400%, respectively. Relative errors increased with the increasing stenosis and aneurysm size, aneurysm length and Re , and decreasing stenosis length. All data generated in this study are freely available and provide a valuable resource for future research.

Funder

Wellcome/Engineering Physical Sciences Research Council Centre for Medical Engineering at King's College London

Department of Health through the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Cardiovascular MedTech Co-operative at Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust

British Heart Foundation

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biochemistry,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biophysics,Biotechnology

Reference74 articles.

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