| Literature DB >> 31653252 |
Qingtao Gu1,2, Shouliang Qi3,4, Yong Yue5, Jing Shen6, Baihua Zhang1, Wei Sun7, Wei Qian1,8, Mohammad Saidul Islam9, Suvash C Saha9, Jianlin Wu10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pulmonary lobectomy has been a well-established curative treatment method for localized lung cancer. After left upper pulmonary lobectomy, the upward displacement of remaining lower lobe causes the distortion or kink of bronchus, which is associated with intractable cough and breathless. However, the quantitative study on structural and functional alterations of the tracheobronchial tree after lobectomy has not been reported. We sought to investigate these alterations using CT imaging analysis and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) method.Entities:
Keywords: Bronchial distortion; CT; Computational fluid dynamics; Lung cancer; Pressure drop; Pulmonary lobectomy; Tracheobronchial tree
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31653252 PMCID: PMC6815003 DOI: 10.1186/s12938-019-0722-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Eng Online ISSN: 1475-925X Impact factor: 2.819
Fig. 1Structural alterations of tracheobronchial trees after the left upper pulmonary lobectomy. a The global appearances. b The angles between the trachea and the main bronchus. c The volume and surface area
Fig. 2Alterations of the left lower lobar bronchus induced by the left upper pulmonary lobectomy. a The cross-sectional area growth rate for all patients. b The alterations of the left lower lobar bronchus
Fig. 3The wall pressure and flow velocity in preoperative and postoperative tracheobronchial trees. a LCP7 with a 51.64% stenosis at the left lower lobar bronchus. b LCP8 with a 21.95% stenosis at the left lower lobar bronchus
Fig. 4Alterations of pressure drop and airflow rate distribution induced by the left upper pulmonary lobectomy. a The pressure drop vs the sectional area of inlet. b The airflow rate distribution
Fig. 5Local structure of the tracheobronchial tree, flow velocity, wall pressure and wall shear stress after the left upper pulmonary lobectomy. a LCP7 with a 51.64% stenosis at the left lower lobar bronchus. b LCP8 with a 21.95% stenosis at the left lower lobar bronchus
Fig. 6The overview of procedure in the current study
Fig. 7Grid independence and validation of CFD accuracy. a The meshes of one tracheobronchial tree model as an example. b Trachea cross section CS1 and bronchus cross section CS2. c Velocity profile along Y at CS1. d The velocity simulated by CFD and the results of MR gas velocity measurement at the section CS2 along X. e The velocity simulated by CFD and the results of MR gas velocity measurement at the section CS2 along Y. f The lobar distribution of airflow rate (RU right upper, RM right middle, RL right lower, LU left upper, LL left lower)