33 research outputs found
Towards the modeling of mucus draining from human lung: role of airways deformation on air-mucus interaction
Chest physiotherapy is an empirical technique used to help secretions to get
out of the lung whenever stagnation occurs. Although commonly used, little is
known about the inner mechanisms of chest physiotherapy and controversies about
its use are coming out regularly. Thus, a scientific validation of chest
physiotherapy is needed to evaluate its effects on secretions.
We setup a quasi-static numerical model of chest physiotherapy based on
thorax and lung physiology and on their respective biophysics. We modeled the
lung with an idealized deformable symmetric bifurcating tree. Bronchi and their
inner fluids mechanics are assumed axisymmetric. Static data from the
literature is used to build a model for the lung's mechanics. Secretions motion
is the consequence of the shear constraints apply by the air flow. The input of
the model is the pressure on the chest wall at each time, and the output is the
bronchi geometry and air and secretions properties.
In the limit of our model, we mimicked manual and mechanical chest
physiotherapy techniques. We show that for secretions to move, air flow has to
be high enough to overcome secretion resistance to motion. Moreover, the higher
the pressure or the quicker it is applied, the higher is the air flow and thus
the mobilization of secretions. However, pressures too high are efficient up to
a point where airways compressions prevents air flow to increases any further.
Generally, the first effects of manipulations is a decrease of the airway tree
hydrodynamic resistance, thus improving ventilation even if secretions do not
get out of the lungs. Also, some secretions might be pushed deeper into the
lungs; this effect is stronger for high pressures and for mechanical chest
physiotherapy. Finally, we propose and tested two adimensional numbers that
depend on lung properties and that allow to measure the efficiency and comfort
of a manipulation
Rheological Changes After Stenting of a Cerebral Aneurysm: A Finite Element Modeling Approach
Hemodynamic changes in intracranial aneurysms after stent placement include the appearance of areas with stagnant flow and low shear rates. We investigated the influence of stent placement on blood flow velocity and wall shear stress of an intracranial aneurysm using a finite element modeling approach. To assess viscosity changes induced by stent placement, the rheology of blood as non-Newtonian fluid was taken into account in this model. A two-dimensional model with a parent artery, a smaller branching artery, and an aneurysm located at the bifurcation, before and after stent placement, was used for simulation. Flow velocity plots and wall shear stress before and after stent placement was calculated over the entire cardiac circle. Values for dynamic viscosity were calculated with a constitutive equation that was based on experimental studies and yielded a viscosity, which decreases as the shear rate increases. Stent placement lowered peak velocities in the main vortex of the aneurysm by a factor of at least 4 compared to peak velocities in the main artery, and it considerably decreased the wall shear stress of the aneurysm. Dynamic viscosity increases after stent placement persisted over a major part of the cardiac cycle, with a factor of up to 10, most pronounced near the dome of the aneurysm. Finite element modeling can offer insight into rheological changes induced by stent treatment of aneurysms and allows visualizing dynamic viscosity changes induced by stent placemen
Confluences, remplissage et vidange (deux aspects singuliers du réseau veineux jambier)
PARIS7-Bibliothèque centrale (751132105) / SudocSudocFranceF
Accurate modelling of unsteady flows in collapsible tubes.
The context of this paper is the development of a general and efficient numerical haemodynamic tool to help clinicians and researchers in understanding of physiological flow phenomena. We propose an accurate one-dimensional Runge-Kutta discontinuous Galerkin (RK-DG) method coupled with lumped parameter models for the boundary conditions. The suggested model has already been successfully applied to haemodynamics in arteries and is now extended for the flow in collapsible tubes such as veins. The main difference with cardiovascular simulations is that the flow may become supercritical and elastic jumps may appear with the numerical consequence that scheme may not remain monotone if no limiting procedure is introduced. We show that our second-order RK-DG method equipped with an approximate Roe's Riemann solver and a slope-limiting procedure allows us to capture elastic jumps accurately. Moreover, this paper demonstrates that the complex physics associated with such flows is more accurately modelled than with traditional methods such as finite difference methods or finite volumes. We present various benchmark problems that show the flexibility and applicability of the numerical method. Our solutions are compared with analytical solutions when they are available and with solutions obtained using other numerical methods. Finally, to illustrate the clinical interest, we study the emptying process in a calf vein squeezed by contracting skeletal muscle in a normal and pathological subject. We compare our results with experimental simulations and discuss the sensitivity to parameters of our model
Description expérimentale et numérique de l'interaction entre un stent biodégradable et la paroi artérielle
PARIS7-Bibliothèque centrale (751132105) / SudocSudocFranceF
Dynamique de structuration des milieux complexes (caractérisation rhéologique et optique des milieux dispersés concentrés)
PARIS7-Bibliothèque centrale (751132105) / SudocSudocFranceF
Rôle de l'activation musculaire sur la dynamique des écoulements veineux
PARIS7-Bibliothèque centrale (751132105) / SudocSudocFranceF
Stabilité et comportement rhéologique des coulis d'injection pour gaine de précontrainte
PARIS7-Bibliothèque centrale (751132105) / SudocSudocFranceF