Bacha Munir1, Yong Xu1. 1. School of Natural and Applied Sciences, Department of Applied Mathematics, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Shaanxi, Xi'an 710072, People's Republic of China.
Abstract
Mechanical ventilation is nowadays a well-developed, safe, and necessary strategy for acute respiratory distress syndrome patients to survive. However, the propagation of microbubbles in airway bifurcations during mechanical ventilation makes the existing lung injury more severe. In this paper, finite element and direct interface tracking techniques were utilized to simulate steady microbubble propagation in a two-dimensional asymmetric bifurcating airway filled with a viscous fluid. Inertial effects were neglected, and the numerical solution of Stokes's equations was used to investigate how gravity and surface tension defined by a Bond (Bo) number and capillary (Ca) number influence the magnitudes of pressure gradients, shear stresses, and shear stress gradients on the bifurcating daughter airway wall. It is found that increasing Bo significantly influenced both the bubble shape and hydrodynamic stresses, where Bo ≥ 0.25 results in a significant increase in bubble elevation and pressure gradient in the upper daughter wall. Although for both Bo and Ca, the magnitude of the pressure gradient is always much larger in the upper daughter airway wall, Ca has a great role in amplifying the magnitude of the pressure gradient. In conclusion, both gravity and surface tension play a key role in the steady microbubble propagation and hydrodynamic stresses in the bifurcating airways.
Mechanical ventilation is nowadays a well-developed, safe, and necessary strategy for acute respiratory distress syndrome patients to survive. However, the propagation of microbubbles in airway bifurcations during mechanical ventilation makes the existing lung injury more severe. In this paper, finite element and direct interface tracking techniques were utilized to simulate steady microbubble propagation in a two-dimensional asymmetric bifurcating airway filled with a viscous fluid. Inertial effects were neglected, and the numerical solution of Stokes's equations was used to investigate how gravity and surface tension defined by a Bond (Bo) number and capillary (Ca) number influence the magnitudes of pressure gradients, shear stresses, and shear stress gradients on the bifurcating daughter airway wall. It is found that increasing Bo significantly influenced both the bubble shape and hydrodynamic stresses, where Bo ≥ 0.25 results in a significant increase in bubble elevation and pressure gradient in the upper daughter wall. Although for both Bo and Ca, the magnitude of the pressure gradient is always much larger in the upper daughter airway wall, Ca has a great role in amplifying the magnitude of the pressure gradient. In conclusion, both gravity and surface tension play a key role in the steady microbubble propagation and hydrodynamic stresses in the bifurcating airways.
The recent outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic has affected a large mass of people throughout
the world. It causes acute
respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), which is a dangerous, even fatal, lung disease. In ARDS, the alveolar–capillary membrane
ruptures and gets more permeable to the pulmonary fluid. This severely compromises gas
exchange between alveoli and bloodstreams and leads to pulmonary edema. Sepsis, hypoxia,
severe pneumonia, smoking, and surfactant deficient lungs are some direct and indirect paths
to develop ARDS. In this regard, mechanical ventilation (MV) is a modern standard of care
for patients suffering from ARDS. Improvements in ventilator-treatment strategies include
positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) and lower tidal volumes (LTVs); however, the
mortality rate from ARDS is still high. During ventilation, oxygen enters the capillaries in the form of
microbubbles. The progressive microbubbles then generate hydrodynamic stresses including
mechanical forces and
exacerbate the lung injury. Ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) was experimentally and
computationally investigated by many researchers. For example, the progression of a
semi-infinite bubble in a collapsed
pulmonary airway was studied both experimentally and computationally. Experimental findings
showed that the epithelial cells were significantly injured by the progressive semi-infinite
bubble, while computational results revealed that the steep and large opposite sign
magnitudes of the pressure gradient near the thin bubble tip are responsible for cell
damage. With the support of this work, Kay et al. proved that the cell injury does not depend on the
semi-infinite bubble exposure duration but is due to the magnitude of the pressure gradient.
An in vitro experimental model for airway reopening was presented to find
the effects of airway diameter and cell confluence on the lung injury. This study mainly focused on the cell necrosis between the
terminal and respiratory bronchioles. They reported that decreasing the reopening velocity
and airway radius results in an increase in hydrodynamic stresses and hence cell damage. A
three-dimensional (3D) image-based finite element analysis indicated that the confocal cells can develop less membrane strain
than the subconfluent cells during collapsed airway reopening. However, it was found that
membrane strain decreases by increasing the cell’s stiffness and cortex region.The effects of Bond number (Bo), Reynolds number (Re), and capillary number (Ca) on
microbubble splitting and cell damage in symmetrically bifurcating airway model were
investigated. It is reported that the
pressure gradient is the key component of stresses, responsible for the upper daughter
airway epithelial cell injury. In another recent study, the effects of Bo, Re, and Ca on small bubble splitting through
symmetrically bifurcating microvessels were investigated. They identified that
vortex-induced shearing is the possible mechanism for endothelial cell damage.
Higuita-Castro et al.
reported that fiber stiffness and topography highly affect the epithelial/endothelial cell
efficiency during fluid occluded airway reopening. The study also showed that the increase
in fiber stiffness can alter the cytoskeletal structure, increase tight junction formation,
and reduce barrier permeability.Tavana et al.
experimentally and theoretically proved that the surfactants can remarkably decrease the
lung injury. Their results indicate that the addition of surfactants can protect the airway
wall’s lining cells from damage. Their parallel computational findings also strongly
supported the experimental results. The Marangoni effects generated by an infinitely long
bubble with surfactants in a capillary
tube were studied. They demonstrated that an increase in the Marangoni effect increased the
pressure and wetting-layer thickness. A similar computational study was conducted for surfactant laden plug progression in
neonatal airways. It is observed that, before the addition of surfactants, the maximum
magnitudes of pressure and shear stress gradients exist. However, after the addition of the
surfactants, the gradients were completely diminished. More recently, Muradoglu et
al. observed that even a tiny
amount of surfactants can highly reduce the mechanical forces and hence the lung injury.
They also concluded that surfactants can delay plug damage and airway reopening.Earlier studies were only limited to bubble propagation/splitting in straight and
symmetrically bifurcating airway models and a corresponding mechanism for epithelial cell
damage. In reality, the pulmonary system is very complex and potentially asymmetric, and the
cell injury mechanism yet remains unknown. In addition, in the previous studies, the
epithelial cell’s damage was strongly correlated with the large and steep opposite sign
magnitudes of the pressure gradient instead of shear stress gradient magnitudes. Previously,
Chen et al.
investigated the effects of gravity, inertia, and surface tension on hydrodynamic stresses;
however, deep into lungs (i.e., between the terminal and respiratory bronchioles), slow
viscous flow exists where the
inertial effects may be neglected. A strong motivation for this analysis is based on the
experimental work of Yalcin et al. and the complex asymmetric bifurcating structure of the airway
tree. This work aims to numerically
elucidate the effects of gravity and surface tension on steady microbubble propagation and
hydrodynamic stresses. More specifically, the study mainly focuses on how these factors can
influence the pressure gradient at the bifurcating airway walls to explore the possible
mechanism for the asymmetric bifurcating airway injury. To carry out successfully this goal,
a computational model was developed to simulate microbubble propagation in a two-dimensional
(2D) asymmetric bifurcating airway filled with a viscous fluid. Assuming quasi-steady
propagation of the microbubble, inertial effects were neglected and Stokes’s equations were
solved using finite element techniques (FETs) in COMSOL for different Bo and Ca values.
PROBLEM STATEMENT
Consider the steady motion of an initially elliptical shape microbubble in an
incompressible Newtonian fluid flowing in an asymmetric bifurcating airway, as shown in
Fig. 1. The radius of the parent airway is R = 500
µm, while the radius of the upper daughter airway is half of the lower.
The microbubble is initially perfectly elliptical with a semi-major/minor axis of 800
µm and 400 µm, respectively, and its center is located
at the origin. The carina is positioned at a point P(1300, 2500), while the branching angle
is α = β = 40°. The total length of the airway is 3600 µm. The fluid has a
constant density (ρ) and dynamic viscosity (μ). The air
inside the bubble has negligible density and viscosity. The momentum and continuity
equations for incompressible Newtonian fluid flow in dimensional forms arewhere I is the unit identity matrix,
u* is the fluid velocity, p* is the pressure, t* is the
time, ρ is the density, μ is the dynamic viscosity,
g is the acceleration of gravity, and T is the transpose of the
matrix.
FIG. 1.
A schematic diagram of the microbubble propagation in the asymmetric bifurcating
airway. r1 and r2 are the radii of the upper and lower daughter
branches, respectively.
A schematic diagram of the microbubble propagation in the asymmetric bifurcating
airway. r1 and r2 are the radii of the upper and lower daughter
branches, respectively.Using R, U, μU/R, and R/U to scale length, velocity, pressure, and, time,
respectively, Eqs. (1) and (2) can be rewritten in the dimensionless form
aswhere the dimensionless numbers Re, Bo, and Ca
are given byand the Cauchy stress tensor σ isThroughout this study, the slow viscous fluid flow (Re ≪ 1) was considered in the
microvasculature, for which the inertial term in Eq. (3) maybe neglected. The final system for incompressible Newtonian fluid flow
isin a fluid domain with a boundary .
Natural and essential boundary conditions
A parabolic velocity profile of mean velocity U was specified at the
inlet and outlet of the channel to ensure the mass balance, while a no-slip boundary
condition at the walls. The domain inside the bubble was not simulated in this work, and so no boundary condition
exists. At the free surface, the following dimensionless normal stress boundary condition
holds:where ∇ is the
surface gradient operator defined as ∇ = (I − nn) · ∇, n is
the unit normal vector from fluid to air, and Pa is the air reference pressure.
Equation (8) is a natural boundary condition
to be applied during variational formulation. The last one is the kinematic boundary
condition given byIn COMSOL, Eq. (9) is directly applied as a “weak constraint” on the free surface.
Variational formulation
Equations (6) and (7) were numerically solved using FET in COMSOL.
To ensure that the mixed weak formulation of Eqs. (6) and (7) is well-posed and
stable, the Ladyzhenskaya–Babuska–Brezzi (LBB) or inf-sup condition should be
satisfied. To fulfill
this condition, quadratic and linear piecewise polynomials or shape functions were
selected for velocity and pressure, respectively, defining quadratic and linear shape functions as Φ and ψ,
respectively. To obtain the weak or variational forms, multiplying Φ and ψ with Eqs. (6) and (7), respectively, and integrating over the spatial domain ∏ must be carried
out. This givesEquations (10) and (11) are the
weighted-integral forms of Eqs. (6) and
(7), respectively. Integrating by parts
Eq. (10) and re-arranging giveUsing Eq. (8) and application of the surface divergence theorem results inwhere the normal stress boundary condition,
given in Eq. (8), has been used on the free
surface boundary . In the derivation of Eq. (13), the contour integral has been neglected because the bubble
propagation has a zero contact line. In addition, the air reference pressure was assumed
to be zero. In this analysis, a negligible term Re∂u/∂t
in Eq. (13) at the left-hand side was also
maintained for time marching, which vanishes at the steady state. Many methods have been
previously used to track the interface of the propagating bubble. However, these methods are highly
computationally expensive and time-wasting. COMSOL has significantly reduced these
efforts. In the current study, the right-hand side of Eq. (13) is applied as a “weak contribution” in COMSOL to directly track
the interface of the propagating bubble at each time step. Finally, Eqs. (11) and (13) are solved with the help of Arbitrary Eulerian–Lagrangian (ALE)
moving a mesh application mode on a freely moving deformed mesh, which constitutes the
fluid domain.
Definition of parameters
The model contains two important parameters, i.e., Ca and Bo. It is necessary to specify
the values of these parameters in the range that can seriously damage the pulmonary
epithelium between the terminal and respiratory bronchioles during ventilation as the
cells in this region are more susceptible to injury. The expected airway radius R and
total cross-sectional area
found in the terminal and respiratory bronchioles range from 0.15 mm to 0.5 mm and 100
cm2 to 1000 cm2, respectively. For normal breathing conditions of
tidal volume equal to 500 ml and 12 breaths/min, typical small reopening velocities are
studied in the literature range from 1 mm/s to 10 mm/s. Assuming the fluid viscosity and air–liquid surface tension as
47 cP and 72 dyn/cm, respectively, the corresponding Re, Ca, and Bo are then given
byandHowever, for lung fluids, having surface tension much lower
than 72 dyn/cm would lead to larger Ca
and Bo values. To investigate all
these possible Ca and Bo values that may exist in the human lungs, inertial effects were
neglected, and about baseline conditions (i.e., Ca = 0.06 and Bo = 0.003), parameter
independent variation studies were then performed for a range of Ca and Bo values.
Convergence and re-meshing strategy
To achieve equilibrium (steady-state solution), a smoothed step function feature was
created to ramp up the inflow velocity. A time step size of Δt = 0.001 s, while relative
and absolute tolerances of 0.0001 and 0.000 01, respectively, with a maximum number of 50
iterations were also specified. The computational domain was fine-meshed with 10 996
quadratic triangular elements. A dense mesh is used near the gas–fluid interface to
achieve correct results during bubble propagation. To avoid the inverted/twisted mesh
elements during the calculation, a re-meshing strategy with a Winslow smoothing method was
also adopted. To make it more understandable, for a moving mesh with the quality of an
element below than 0.1, were considered as a worst, automatic re-meshing procedures were
applied to re-mesh the geometry with a good quality of elements and computations were
continued.
Mesh independence analysis
A mesh independence study was also conducted to evaluate the correct mesh size for mass
conservation and hydrodynamic stresses. According to the law of conservation of mass, the
flow rate in the parent channel must be equal to the sum of the flow rates in the daughter
channels if there is no change in bubble volume. Mathematically, Q =
Q1 + Q2, where
Q is the total flow rate in the parent channel and
Q1 and Q2 are the flow rates in
the lower and upper daughter channels, respectively. To satisfy this condition, two
different mesh sizes were examined. For each mesh size, the inlet and outlet flow rates
and bubble volume change were compared. By checking mesh statistics, initially, 10 996
quadratic triangular elements were used. Then, an extra-fine mesh of 16 466 elements was
simulated, and the mass conservation difference and bubble volume change were recorded to
be less than 1% and 0.5%, respectively. For both mesh densities, the difference in
pressure and shear stress gradient magnitudes was found to be less than 1%.
RESULTS
Effect of Bond number
In this study, the influence of gravity on pressure gradients, shear stresses, and shear
stress gradients is analyzed by varying Bo from 0.003 to 0.5 with fixed Ca = 0.06. The
airway is asymmetrically bifurcated such that the diameter of the lower daughter airway is
two times that of the upper daughter airway. Figure
2(a) shows that initially, at a low Bo value (i.e., Bo = 0.003), a large volume
of bubbles penetrates the lower daughter airway (larger diameter airway) and a thin bubble
nose moves to the upper daughter airway (smaller diameter airway). However, as Bo
increases, the buoyancy force pushes the bubble to the upper narrow daughter airway, and
consequently, there is an increase in the volume of the thin bubble nose, as shown in
Figs. 2(b) and 2(c).
FIG. 2.
Microbubble profile during propagation in the asymmetric bifurcating airway at
different Bo values with fixed Ca = 0.06 and time, t = 0.037 s. Bo = 0.003 (a), Bo =
0.25 (b), and Bo = 0.5 (c).
Microbubble profile during propagation in the asymmetric bifurcating airway at
different Bo values with fixed Ca = 0.06 and time, t = 0.037 s. Bo = 0.003 (a), Bo =
0.25 (b), and Bo = 0.5 (c).The effects of Bo on pressure gradients, shear stresses, and shear stress gradients along
the upper and lower daughter airway walls are shown in Figs.
3 and 4, respectively. Figure 3(a) shows that the pressure gradient is initially (i.e., at zero
arc length) very low; however, as it penetrates to the upper daughter airway, there is a
peak in the pressure gradient at a point approximately (0.0005, 0). It also reveals that
as Bo increases, the peak in the pressure gradient also increases in the upper daughter
airway wall, while it decreases in the lower airway wall, as can be seen in Fig. 4(a). Similar patterns were also observed for shear
stress and its gradients [Figs. 3(b), 3(c), 4(b), and
4(c)] in the upper and lower daughter airway walls.
However, these results indicate that the magnitudes of the shear stress and its gradients
are significantly low compared to the pressure gradient. This strongly suggests that the
pressure gradient is a potential component of hydrodynamic stresses, which can seriously
damage the pulmonary epithelium.
FIG. 3.
Effect of Bo on pressure gradient (a), shear stress (b), and shear stress gradient
(c) along with the upper daughter airway wall at fixed Ca = 0.06.
FIG. 4.
Effect of Bo on pressure gradient (a), shear stress (b), and shear stress gradient
(c) along with the lower daughter airway wall at fixed Ca = 0.06.
Effect of Bo on pressure gradient (a), shear stress (b), and shear stress gradient
(c) along with the upper daughter airway wall at fixed Ca = 0.06.Effect of Bo on pressure gradient (a), shear stress (b), and shear stress gradient
(c) along with the lower daughter airway wall at fixed Ca = 0.06.
Effect of capillary number
To investigate the effects of surface tension on pressure gradients and shear stress and
its gradients, Ca was computed for different values (i.e., 0.000 65, 0.006, 0.06) with
constant Bo = 0.003. It is observed that at low Ca, the bubble is almost circular, leaves
a thin liquid layer with the parent airway wall, and splits negligibly to the leading
daughter branches. For larger Ca, the bubble is elongated and adds more fluid to the thin
liquid layer. Results indicate that at larger Ca, the bubble penetrates significantly to
both the daughter branches with thicker film thickness. Moreover, Ca has a remarkable
effect on pressure gradients, shear stresses, and shear stress gradients compared to
gravity. Figure 5(a) shows that even at low Bo, for
Ca = 0.000 65, there is a large and complex cycle of pressure gradient near the thin
bubble tip in the upper daughter airway wall, which rapidly decreases as Ca increases.
Interestingly, increasing Ca leads to a decrease in pressure gradients in both the leading
daughter walls. In addition, the similar fashions of shear stress and its gradients were
noted for Ca in both the upper and lower daughter airway walls [Figs. 5(b), 5(c), 6(b), and 6(c)].
More importantly, the pressure gradient has a very large magnitude in comparison to the
shear stress gradient.
FIG. 5.
Effect of Ca on pressure gradient (a), shear stress (b), and shear stress gradient
(c) along with the upper daughter airway wall at fixed Bo = 0.003.
FIG. 6.
Effect of Ca on pressure gradient (a), shear stress (b), and shear stress gradient
(c) along with the lower daughter airway wall at fixed Bo = 0.003.
Effect of Ca on pressure gradient (a), shear stress (b), and shear stress gradient
(c) along with the upper daughter airway wall at fixed Bo = 0.003.Effect of Ca on pressure gradient (a), shear stress (b), and shear stress gradient
(c) along with the lower daughter airway wall at fixed Bo = 0.003.
DISCUSSION
It is now clear that mechanically ventilating patients suffering from ARDS can complicate
existing cell damage. In this analysis, a finite element numerical approach was used to
investigate the effects of Bo and Ca on pressure gradients, shear stresses, and shear stress
gradients in a 2D asymmetric bifurcating airway model. In previous experimental
studies, Bo was simulated
in the range from 0 to 1.26. In the case of computational work, Bo is estimated (between the conducting and respiratory
bronchioles) by assuming the airway as symmetrically bifurcating in the range from 0.068 to
1.36, and for larger Bo (i.e., Bo > 1), the bubble tends to split unequally. For the
problem in hand, Bo can be approximated from 0.0031 to 0.5 as lung fluids may have different
surface tensions (see Sec. II C). In the current
analysis, the effective value of Bo is 0.25 at which the bubble starts to elevate the upper
narrow daughter branch and is much less than 1. It shows that the range of Bo varies in the
airway tree, and it is difficult to estimate the range of Bo for present work from the
previous study where symmetrically bifurcating airway was analyzed.In present numerical simulations, Bo was varied from 0.0031 to 0.5 with fixed Ca = 0.06.
Interestingly, at low Bo, the bubble penetrates to the lower gravity favor branch, while it
elevates dramatically to the upper daughter branch for Bo ≥ 0.25 due to buoyancy forces
(Fig. 2). It is also found that increasing Bo results
in an increase in pressure gradients in the upper daughter airway wall, while a decrease in
the lower, as shown in Figs. 3(a) and 4(a). These results are consistent with the previous
results, where bubble propagation was
simulated in symmetrically bifurcating airways. Chen et al. proved that at
low Bo, the bubble always splits symmetrically, and the magnitudes of pressure and shear
stress gradients are identical. However, the asymmetric bubble flows are unique from
symmetric bubble propagation due to two major reasons found here. First, the microbubble
volume that penetrates to the daughter branches is always unequal even if the buoyancy force
is dominant (Fig. 2). Second, the magnitudes of
hydrodynamic stresses including pressure and shear stress gradients are also always larger
in the upper daughter airway wall compared to lower daughter airway wall even at low Bo (see
Figs. 3 and 4).
The reason for larger hydrodynamic stresses in the upper daughter airway is that the
magnitudes of hydrodynamic stresses are inversely proportional to airway radius. Results demonstrate that the
pressure gradient magnitudes are much larger than the magnitudes of shear stress gradient.
The pressure gradient is the potential component of hydrodynamic stresses to damage
pulmonary epithelium. It also shows that for buoyancy-driven flows in bifurcating airways,
the lower daughter airway wall is safer from mechanical stresses related injuries than the
upper daughter airway walls.Previously, many researchers used computational techniques to simulate microbubble
propagation in straight and bifurcating airways for a wide range of Ca values (i.e., 0.0008
≤ Ca ≤ 1). In addition, in
in vitro experimental conditions of airway reopening, Ca varies in the
range 0.0001 ≤ Ca ≤ 0.01.
In this work, as in Sec. II C, Ca was simulated in the
range 0.000 65 ≤ Ca ≤ 0.06, which may exist in the human’s deep lungs (i.e., between the
terminal and respiratory bronchioles). The effect of Ca on pressure gradients, shear
stresses, and shear stress gradients in the bifurcating daughter airway walls has been shown
in Figs. 5 and 6.
Figure 5(a) shows that at low Ca, there is a large
and complex cycle of pressure gradient near the thin bubble cape in the upper daughter
airway wall. As Ca increases, the magnitude of the pressure gradient dramatically decreases.
Figure 6(a) indicates that as Ca increases, the
pressure gradient has also the same patterns in the lower daughter airway wall as well. The
results presented here strongly agree with the previously published data by many
authors. Again, the
magnitudes of pressure and shear stress gradients are much larger in the upper daughter
airway wall, which supports the result that the magnitudes of hydrodynamic stresses are
inversely proportional to the diameter of the airway. The magnitude of the pressure gradient
in the upper daughter airway wall is more sensitive to Ca compared to Bo. These results
suggest that the cell damage has a strong correlation with a pressure gradient, weak with
shear stress gradient and negligible with shear stress. On the basis of these results, one can easily conclude that the
upper daughter airway wall would experience more cell necrosis compared to the lower.Besides, as this computational model presented significant effects of gravity and surface
tension on the magnitudes of the pressure gradient in the bifurcating airways, this model
also has two theoretical predictions that could be examined in future experimental studies
on the asymmetric bifurcating airways. First, as shown in Fig.
2, a small volume of the bubble moves to the upper daughter branch as Bo increases,
and the magnitudes of pressure gradient are much larger in the upper daughter airway wall
than the lower even at low Bo, and this implies that the upper daughter airway wall would
experience more cellular injuries. Second, for each low or large dimensionless bubble
velocity Ca, the upper narrow daughter airway wall is more prone to cell necrosis.
CONCLUSIONS
In this paper, an asymmetric bifurcating airway model was proposed, where the diameter of
the upper daughter airway is half of the lower. Finite element procedures were utilized and
solved Stokes’s equation to simulate steady microbubble propagation in the asymmetric
bifurcating airways for different Bo and Ca values. This computational model has some
simplifications that limit its direct applicability and its comparison with the real
in vivo system. In this model, the mucus fluid is Newtonian with constant
density and viscosity. However, in the human pulmonary system, the mucus fluid is
non-Newtonian and has different types of properties such as shear-thinning, viscoelasticity,
and more specifically non-zero yield stress (i.e., 400–600 dyn/cm2 for healthy
lungs and higher for diseased), which results in hydrodynamic stress amplification and cell
death. The surface
tension is assumed to be constant, while in the pulmonary system at the gas–liquid
interface, spatial and temporal gradients of surface tension exist in the presence of
pulmonary surfactants. In
this analysis, the role of surfactants has also been neglected; however, earlier studies
have shown that surfactants reduce the hydrodynamic stresses and play a key role in cell
protection. Although the
airway’s walls are rigid, in the pulmonary system, the airway’s walls are elastic/compliant,
and during the reopening of collapsed pulmonary airways, large magnitudes of inward-directed
pressure gradients exist, which can further damage epithelial cells. Finally, this model does not include any live
cells cultured on the airway wall, while there are uncountable live cells in the pulmonary
system.Although this computational model has several limitations, this idealized asymmetric
bifurcating airway model has provided much important new information about microbubble
propagation/splitting and epithelial cell damage. In the future, additional computational
studies on bifurcating airways are required to better understand the pulmonary mechanical
response.In conclusion, this computational study aimed at elucidating the effects of gravity and
surface tension on microbubble propagation and pressure and shear stress gradients. Results
indicate that although a small fraction of the bubble penetrates the upper daughter airway
as Bo increases, the magnitudes of the pressure gradient are much larger than of the lower.
Similarly, in the case of low bubble velocities (i.e., low Ca), there is a large and complex
cycle of the pressure gradient in the upper daughter airway wall. These results imply that
in a lung’s deep asymmetric bifurcating airways, the daughter airway with a smaller diameter
is more susceptible to injury compared to the larger diameter daughter airway as the
magnitudes of hydrodynamic stresses are inversely proportional to the airway diameter. This
study indicates that Ca has a greater impact on the magnitudes of the pressure gradient than
Bo. This computational analysis has, therefore, listed important novel information about the
understanding of the mechanism of epithelial cell injury in complex bifurcating
geometries.
DATA AVAILABILITY
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding
author upon reasonable request.