Pump efficacy in a two-dimensional, fluid–structure interaction model of a chain of contracting lymphangions

被引:0
|
作者
Hallie Elich
Aaron Barrett
Varun Shankar
Aaron L. Fogelson
机构
[1] University of Utah,Department of Mathematics
[2] University of Utah,School of Computing
[3] University of Utah,Department of Biomedical Engineering
来源
Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology | 2021年 / 20卷
关键词
Computational model; Lymphatic contraction; Lymphatic transport; Lymphatic valves; Pump-function plots;
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学科分类号
摘要
The transport of lymph through the lymphatic vasculature is the mechanism for returning excess interstitial fluid to the circulatory system, and it is essential for fluid homeostasis. Collecting lymphatic vessels comprise a significant portion of the lymphatic vasculature and are divided by valves into contractile segments known as lymphangions. Despite its importance, lymphatic transport in collecting vessels is not well understood. We present a computational model to study lymph flow through chains of valved, contracting lymphangions. We used the Navier–Stokes equations to model the fluid flow and the immersed boundary method to handle the two-way, fluid–structure interaction in 2D, non-axisymmetric simulations. We used our model to evaluate the effects of chain length, contraction style, and adverse axial pressure difference (AAPD) on cycle-mean flow rates (CMFRs). In the model, longer lymphangion chains generally yield larger CMFRs, and they fail to generate positive CMFRs at higher AAPDs than shorter chains. Simultaneously contracting pumps generate the largest CMFRs at nearly every AAPD and for every chain length. Due to the contraction timing and valve dynamics, non-simultaneous pumps generate lower CMFRs than the simultaneous pumps; the discrepancy diminishes as the AAPD increases. Valve dynamics vary with the contraction style and exhibit hysteretic opening and closing behaviors. Our model provides insight into how contraction propagation affects flow rates and transport through a lymphangion chain.
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页码:1941 / 1968
页数:27
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