Highlights are optional yet highly encouraged for this journal, as they increase the discoverability of your article via search engines. They consist of a short collection of bullet points that capture the novel results of your research as well as new methods that were used during the study (if any). Please have a look at the examples here: example Highlights. Highlights should be submitted in a separate editable file in the online submission system. Please use 'Highlights' in the file name and include 3 to 5 bullet points (maximum 85 characters, including spaces, per bullet point).
This work explores the use of an embedded Computational Fluid Dynamics method to study the type B Aortic Dissection. The use of the proposed technique makes it possible to easily test different Intimal Flap configurations without any need of remeshing. To validate the presented methodology we take as reference test case an in vitro experiment present in the literature. This experiment, which considers several Intimal Flap tear configurations (number, size and location), mimics the blood flow in a real type B Aortic Dissection. We prove the correctness and suitability of the presented approach by comparing the pressure values and waveform. The obtained results exhibit a remarkable similarity with the experimental reference data.Complementary, we present a feasible surgical application of the presented computer method. The aim is to help the clinicians in the decision-making before the type B Aortic Dissection surgical fenestration. The capabilities of the proposed technique are exploited to efficiently create artificial re-entry tear configurations . We highlight that only the radius and center of the re-entry tear need to be specified by the clinicians, without any need to modify neither the model geometry nor the mesh.The obtained computational surgical fenestration results are in line with the medical observations in similar clinical studies.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.