A mathematical model of coronary blood flow control: simulation of patient-specific three-dimensional hemodynamics during exercise

Author:

Arthurs Christopher J.1ORCID,Lau Kevin D.12,Asrress Kaleab N.3,Redwood Simon R.3,Figueroa C. Alberto12

Affiliation:

1. Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, King's College London, King's Health Partners, St. Thomas' Hospital, London, United Kingdom;

2. Departments of Surgery and Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

3. King's College London British Heart Foundation Centre of Excellence, The Rayne Institute, St. Thomas' Hospital Campus, London, United Kingdom; and

Abstract

This work presents a mathematical model of the metabolic feedback and adrenergic feedforward control of coronary blood flow that occur during variations in the cardiac workload. It is based on the physiological observations that coronary blood flow closely follows myocardial oxygen demand, that myocardial oxygen debts are repaid, and that control oscillations occur when the system is perturbed and so are phenomenological in nature. Using clinical data, we demonstrate that the model can provide patient-specific estimates of coronary blood flow changes between rest and exercise, requiring only the patient's heart rate and peak aortic pressure as input. The model can be used in zero-dimensional lumped parameter network studies or as a boundary condition for three-dimensional multidomain Navier-Stokes blood flow simulations. For the first time, this model provides feedback control of the coronary vascular resistance, which can be used to enhance the physiological accuracy of any hemodynamic simulation, which includes both a heart model and coronary arteries. This has particular relevance to patient-specific simulation for which heart rate and aortic pressure recordings are available. In addition to providing a simulation tool, under our assumptions, the derivation of our model shows that β-feedforward control of the coronary microvascular resistance is a mathematical necessity and that the metabolic feedback control must be dependent on two error signals: the historical myocardial oxygen debt, and the instantaneous myocardial oxygen deficit.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

Reference72 articles.

1. Theoretical model of metabolic blood flow regulation: roles of ATP release by red blood cells and conducted responses

2. Arthurs CJ, Lau K, Figueroa CA. A combined feedforward and feed-back system for simulating neural and local control of coronary resistance and compliance (Conference Abstract). In: 3rd International Conference on Computational and Mathematical Biomedical Engineering. Hong Kong: CMBE, 2013.

3. Reduced regional myocardial perfusion in the presence of pharmacologic vasodilator reserve.

4. Understanding Coronary Blood Flow

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