Journal Article10.1007/S10237-021-01495-9
Image-based patient-specific flow simulations are consistent with stroke in pediatric cerebrovascular disease.
Shaolie S. Hossain,Shaolie S. Hossain,Zbigniew Starosolski,Zbigniew Starosolski,Travis Sanders,Michael J. Johnson,Michael C.H. Wu,Ming-Chen Hsu,Dianna M. Milewicz,Ananth Annapragada,Ananth Annapragada +10 more
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used an unsteady Navier-Stokes solver within an isogeometric analysis framework to predict contralateral stroke in a pediatric MMD patient with an occlusion in the right middle cerebral artery.
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Abstract: Moyamoya disease (MMD) is characterized by narrowing of the distal internal carotid artery and the circle of Willis (CoW) and leads to recurring ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke. A retrospective review of data from 50 pediatric MMD patients revealed that among the 24 who had a unilateral stroke and were surgically treated, 11 (45.8%) had a subsequent, contralateral stroke. There is no reliable way to predict these events. After a pilot study in Acta−/− mice that have features of MMD, we hypothesized that local hemodynamics are predictive of contralateral strokes and sought to develop a patient-specific analysis framework to noninvasively assess this stroke risk. A pediatric MMD patient with an occlusion in the right middle cerebral artery and a right-sided stroke, who was surgically treated and then had a contralateral stroke, was selected for analysis. By using an unsteady Navier–Stokes solver within an isogeometric analysis framework, blood flow was simulated in the CoW model reconstructed from the patient’s postoperative imaging data, and the results were compared with those from an age- and sex-matched control subject. A wall shear rate (WSR) > 60,000 s−1 (about 12 × higher than the coagulation threshold of 5000 s−1 and 9 × higher than control) was measured in the terminal left supraclinoid artery; its location coincided with that of the subsequent postsurgical left-sided stroke. A parametric study of disease progression revealed a strong correlation between the degree of vascular morphology altered by MMD and local hemodynamic environment. The results suggest that an occlusion in the CoW could lead to excessive contralateral WSRs, resulting in thromboembolic ischemic events, and that WSR could be a predictor of future stroke.
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Citations
Modeling and computational fluid dynamics simulation of blood flow behavior based on MRI and CT for Atherosclerosis in Carotid Artery
Hani Attar,Tasneem Ahmed,Rahma Rabie,A. Amer,Mohammad R. Khosravi,Ahmed Amin Ahmed Solyman,Mohanad A. Deif +6 more
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Patient-Specific Modeling Could Predict Occurrence of Pediatric Stroke
John Horn,M. J. Johnson,Zbigniew Starosolski,Avner Meoded,Dianna M. Milewicz,Ananth Annapragada,Shaolie S. Hossain +6 more
TL;DR: The findings of this study suggest that WSR-based metrics could be predictive of future stroke risk after an initial stroke in pediatric MMD patients and better predictions may be possible by performing patient-specific hemodynamic analysis at multiple timepoints during patient follow-up to monitor changes in the WSR -based metrics.
A parametric study of the effect of 3D plaque shape on local hemodynamics and implications for plaque instability
Shaolie S. Hossain,Michael J. Johnson,Thomas J.R. Hughes +2 more
TL;DR: A parametric study of the effect of 3D plaque shape on local hemodynamics and implications for plaque instability explores the effects of 3D plaque shape on local hemodynamics and its implications for plaque instability. The study finds that proximally skewed eccentric plaques have the most vulnerable combination of high WSS and high positive spatial WSSG.
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TL;DR: In this article , a method for adjusting model vessel geometry utilizing 2D X-ray angiography (XA), which is considered the gold standard for clinically assessing vessel caliber, was proposed.
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TL;DR: In this article , the results obtained by Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) are summarized and an attempt is made to deduce the broad causes of various errors and possible solutions.
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