| Literature DB >> 35140672 |
Sylvia Saalfeld1,2, Janneck Stahl1,3, Jana Korte1,2, Laurel Morgan Miller Marsh1,3,4, Bernhard Preim2, Oliver Beuing5, Yurii Cherednychenko6, Daniel Behme1,7, Philipp Berg1,3.
Abstract
Numerous studies assess intracranial aneurysm rupture risk based on morphological and hemodynamic parameter analysis in addition to clinical information such as aneurysm localization, age, and sex. However, intracranial aneurysms mostly occur with a saccular shape located either lateral to the parent artery or at a bifurcation. In contrast, fusiform intracranial aneurysms (FIAs), i.e., aneurysms with a non-saccular, dilated form, occur in approximately 3-13% of all cases and therefore have not yet been as thoroughly studied. To improve the understanding of FIA hemodynamics, this pilot study contains morphological analyses and image-based blood flow simulations in three patient-specific cases. For a precise and realistic comparison to the pre-pathological state, each dilation was manually removed and the time-dependent blood flow simulations were repeated. Additionally, a validated fast virtual stenting approach was applied to evaluate the effect of virtual endovascular flow-diverter deployment focusing on relevant hemodynamic quantities. For two of the three patients, post-interventional information was available and included in the analysis. The results of this numerical pilot study indicate that complex flow structures, i.e., helical flow phenomena and the presence of high oscillating flow features, predominantly occur in FIAs with morphologically differing appearances. Due to the investigation of the individual healthy states, the original flow environment could be restored which serves as a reference for the virtual treatment target. It was shown that the realistic deployment led to a considerable stabilization of the individual hemodynamics in all cases. Furthermore, a quantification of the stent-induced therapy effect became feasible for the treating physician. The results of the morphological and hemodynamic analyses in this pilot study show that virtual stenting can be used in FIAs to quantify the effect of the planned endovascular treatment.Entities:
Keywords: blood flow patterns; endovascular treatment; fusiform intracranial aneurysm; hemodynamic simulation; virtual stent deployment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35140672 PMCID: PMC8818669 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.771694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Depiction of the three fusiform aneurysm cases (marked with an arrow) and their corresponding healthy 3D models. Case 1 is depicted in (A,B). Case 2 is depicted in (C,D) and Case 3 is depicted in (E,F), respectively. Furthermore, for each fusiform aneurysm case, a detailed presentation is given in (G–I).
Figure 2Results of the virtual flow-diverter deployment for Case 1 (left), Case 2 (center), and Case 3 (right). Inlays show the explicit resolution of the braided stent structure allowing for a precise evaluation of the post-interventional hemodynamic state.
Nominal geometric parameters of the virtual flow-diverter stents for each patient-specific FIA.
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| 1 | 20 | 3 | 48 | 42 |
| 2 | 10 | 2.25 | 48 | 42 |
| 3 | 60 | 7 | 52 | 42 |
Morphological analysis for each case, where max.
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| 1 | 14.53 | 4.21 | 345 |
| 2 | 7.40 | 1.24 | 581 |
| 3 | 70.51 | 22.61 | 312 |
CAS.
Figure 3Illustration of the hemodynamic results for Case 1. Fusiform (left) denotes the 3D model of the FIA; Healthy (center) the manually-created healthy counterpart; Treated (right) the 3D model after virtual stenting. The following flow- and shear-related parameters are presented from top to bottom: Pathline visualization, AWSS, OSI, RRT, OVI, KE. For illustration purposes, view points are not always identical but chosen such that the most interesting features are visualized.
Figure 4Illustration of the hemodynamic results for Case 2. Fusiform (left) denotes the 3D model of the FIA; Healthy (center) the manually-created healthy counterpart; Treated (right) the virtually stented model. The following flow- and shear-related parameters are presented from top to bottom: Pathline visualization, AWSS, OSI, RRT, OVI, KE.
Figure 5Illustration of the hemodynamic results for Case 3. Fusiform (left) denotes the 3D model of the fusiform intracranial aneurysm; Healthy (center) the manually-created healthy counterpart; Treated (right) the 3D model after virtual stenting. The following flow- and shear-related parameters are presented from top to bottom: Pathline visualization, AWSS, OSI, RRT, OVI, KE.