Artery stiffening is known as an important pathological change that precedes small vessel dysfunction, but underlying cellular mechanisms are still elusive. This paper reports the development of a flow co-culture system that imposes a range of arterial-like pulse flow waves, with similar mean flow rate but varied pulsatility controlled by upstream stiffness, onto a 3-D endothelial-smooth muscle cell co-culture. Computational fluid dynamics results identified a uniform flow area critical for cell mechanobiology studies. For validation, experimentally measured flow profiles were compared to computationally simulated flow profiles, which revealed percentage difference in the maximum flow to be <10, <5, or <1% for a high, medium, or low pulse flow wave, respectively. This comparison indicated that the computational model accurately demonstrated experimental conditions. The results from endothelial expression of proinflammatory genes and from determination of proliferating smooth muscle cell percentage both showed that cell activities did not vary within the identified uniform flow region, but were upregulated by high pulse flow compared to steady flow. The flow system developed and characterized here provides an important tool to enhance the understanding of vascular cell remodeling under flow environments regulated by stiffening.
Recent clinical studies of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) have found correlations between increased pulmonary vascular stiffness (PVS) and poorer disease outcomes. However, mechanistic questions remain about the relationships amongst PVS, RV power, and vascular hemodynamics in the setting of progressive PAH that are difficult or impossible to answer using direct measurements. Clinically-validated patient-specific computational modeling may allow exploration of these issues through perturbation-based predictive testing. Here we use a simple patient-specific model to answer four questions: how do hemodynamics change as PAH worsens? How does increasing PVS impact hemodynamics and RV power? For a patient with moderate PAH, what are the consequences if the pressures increase modestly yet sufficiently to engage collagen in those vessels? What impact does pressure-reducing vasodilator treatment have on hemodynamics? Twenty-one sets of model-predicted impedance and mean PA pressure (mPAP) show good agreement with clinical measurements, thereby validating the model. Worsening was modeled using data from three PAH outcomes groups; these show not only the expected increase in mPAP, but also an increase in pressure pulsatility. Interestingly, chronically increasing mPAP decreased WSS, suggesting that increased PA cross-sectional area affected WSS greater than increased PVS. For a patient with moderately high PVR (12.7 WU) with elastin-based upstream vascular remodeling, moving from elastin-dominant vessel behavior to collagen-dominant behavior caused substantial increases in mPAP, pressure and WSS pulsatility. For the same patient, reducing PVR through a simulated vasodilator to a value equivalent to mild PAH did not decrease pressure pulsatility and dramatically increased WSS pulsatility. Overall, these results suggest a close association between PVS and hemodynamics and that hemodynamics may play an important role in progressing PAH. These support the hypothesis that treatments should target decreasing or reversing upstream vascular remodeling in addition to decreasing mean pressures.
We develop a simple computational model based on measurements from a hypoxic neonatal calf model of pulmonary hypertension (PH) to investigate the interplay between vascular and ventricular measures in the setting of progressive PH. Model parameters were obtained directly from in vivo and ex vivo measurements of neonatal calves. Seventeen sets of model-predicted impedance and mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) show good agreement with the animal measurements, thereby validating the model. Next, we considered a predictive model in which three parameters, PVR, elastic modulus (EM), and arterial thickness, were varied singly from one simulation to the next to study their individual roles in PH progression. Finally, we used the model to predict the individual impacts of clinical (vasodilatory) and theoretical (compliance increasing) PH treatments on improving pulmonary hemodynamics. Our model (1) displayed excellent patient-specific agreement with measured global pulmonary parameters; (2) quantified relationships between PVR and mean pressure and PVS and pulse pressure, as well as studiying the right ventricular (RV) afterload, which could be measured as a hydraulic load calculated from spectral analysis of pulmonary artery pressure and flow waves; (3) qualitatively confirmed the derangement of vascular wall shear stress in progressive PH; and (4) established that decreasing proximal vascular stiffness through a theoretical treatment of reversing proximal vascular remodeling could decrease RV afterload.
This paper proposes a novel blast wave mitigation device, consisting of a piston-cylinder assembly. A shock wave is induced inside the device when it is subject to a blast wave. The shock wave propagates inside the device and is reflected repeatedly. The physical processes within the blast wave mitigation device are simulated numerically. Numerical predictions are in excellent agreement with analytical solutions for special cases of the investigated problem that are available in the literature. The peak pressure on the base of the device caused by the blast wave is studied using a number of design parameters. The numerical simulation shows that, although the transmitted impulse remains practically unchanged, the peak pressure of the blast wave can be reduced by as much as 98%, or even higher, depending on the design parameters chosen. r
This paper proposes a novel blast wave mitigation device, consisting of a piston-cylinder assembly. A shock wave is induced inside the device when it is subject to a blast wave. The shock wave propagates inside the device and is reflected repeatedly. The physical processes within the blast wave mitigation device are simulated numerically. Numerical predictions are in excellent agreement with analytical solutions for special cases of the investigated problem that are available in the literature. The peak pressure on the base of the device caused by the blast wave is studied using a number of design parameters. The numerical simulation shows that, although the transmitted impulse remains practically unchanged, the peak pressure of the blast wave can be reduced by as much as 98%, or even higher, depending on the design parameters chosen. r
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