| Literature DB >> 28649146 |
S M Javid Mahmoudzadeh Akherat1, Kevin Cassel1, Michael Boghosian1, Mary Hammes2, Fredric Coe2.
Abstract
The surgical creation of vascular accesses for renal failure patients provides an abnormally high flow rate conduit in the patient's upper arm vasculature that facilitates the hemodialysis treatment. These vascular accesses, however, are very often associated with complications that lead to access failure and thrombotic incidents, mainly due to excessive neointimal hyperplasia (NH) and subsequently stenosis. Development of a framework to monitor and predict the evolution of the venous system post access creation can greatly contribute to maintaining access patency. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has been exploited to inspect the non-homeostatic wall shear stress (WSS) distribution that is speculated to trigger NH in the patient cohort under investigation. Thereafter, CFD in liaison with a gradient-free shape optimization method has been employed to analyze the deformation modes of the venous system enduring non-physiological hemodynamics. It is observed that the optimally evolved shapes and their corresponding hemodynamics strive to restore the homeostatic state of the venous system to a normal, pre-surgery condition. It is concluded that a CFD-shape optimization coupling that seeks to regulate the WSS back to a well-defined physiological WSS target range can accurately predict the mode of patient-specific access failure.Entities:
Keywords: Arteriovenous Fistula; CFD; Hemodialysis; Hemodynamics; Neointimal Hyperplasia; Shape Optimization; Vascular Access
Year: 2017 PMID: 28649146 PMCID: PMC5479643 DOI: 10.1016/j.cma.2017.03.036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Methods Appl Mech Eng ISSN: 0045-7825 Impact factor: 6.756