Wall Shear Stress-Based Hemodynamic Descriptors in the ‎Abdominal Aorta Bifurcation: Analysis of a Case Study

The knowledge of hemodynamic behaviour in the abdominal aorta artery bifurcation is of great ‎importance for the early diagnosis of several cardiovascular diseases common in this bifurcation. The ‎work developed focuses on a case study of hemodynamic in the abdominal aorta artery bifurcation, ‎based...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. Soares, F. Carvalho, A. Leite
Format: article
Language:EN
Published: Isfahan University of Technology 2021
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Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/17a06ddf54c84b9ca068766db7171f2b
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Summary:The knowledge of hemodynamic behaviour in the abdominal aorta artery bifurcation is of great ‎importance for the early diagnosis of several cardiovascular diseases common in this bifurcation. The ‎work developed focuses on a case study of hemodynamic in the abdominal aorta artery bifurcation, ‎based on a realistic 3D geometric model reconstructed from 2D medical images of a real patient. ‎Hemodynamic quantities based on the wall shear stress (WSS) of the abdominal aorta bifurcation are ‎analysed and is presented an alternative analysis of the well-established stress hemodynamic descriptors ‎to identify specific zones of the artery with a higher probability of developing cardiovascular diseases. ‎The individual analysis of different zones of the artery allowed to obtain information that can remain ‎masked when whole artery is considered as a single zone. The reported results provide a correlation ‎between the analysed stress hemodynamic descriptors and the area of the wall artery. Then, the aim of ‎this work is the identification of regions at the luminal surface subject to atherosusceptible WSS ‎phenotypes. For the patient studied, the analysis presented allowed the identification of the patient's ‎propensity to develop atherosclerosis, according to the hemodynamic descriptors time-averaged WSS ‎‎(TAWSS), oscillatory shear index (OSI), and relative residence time (RRT). Thus, this work offers a new ‎way of looking to the stress hemodynamic descriptors.‎