RUS  ENG
Full version
JOURNALS // Matematicheskaya Biologiya i Bioinformatika // Archive

Mat. Biolog. Bioinform., 2018 Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 337–347 (Mi mbb340)

This article is cited in 1 paper

Mathematical Modeling

Computer modeling of fluid flow through the heart valve bioprosthesis

K. Yu. Klyshnikova, E. A. Ovcharenkoa, A. V. Batraninb, D. A. Dolgovc, Yu. N. Zakharovcd, K. S. Ivanovc, Yu. A. Kudryavtsevaa, Yu. I. Shokind, L. S. Barbarasha

a Federal State Budgetary Scientific Institution «Research Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular Diseases», Kemerovo, Russia
b National Research Tomsk Polytechnic University, Tomsk, Russia
c Federal State Budget Educational Institution for Higher Professional Education «Kemerovo State University», Kemerovo, Russia
d Institute of Computational Technologies of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk, Russia

Abstract: The paper describes the features of in silico simulation of fluid flows of variable viscosity in the study of prosthetic heart valves. Computer modeling and its verification were performed on the example of the bioprosthesis "UniLine" (Russia) used in modern cardio-surgical practice. A spatial model of the object of investigation was obtained by the method of computer microtomography, followed by the reconstruction of the primitive grid in two-dimensional sections. In the numerical experiment, the immersed boundary method was used. Herein the interaction of a solid and a liquid as well as the impact of mechanics of deformation of the elements of the prosthesis, such as the winged apparatus, were taken into account. Verification of the calculation algorithm was performed in the pulsating flow setup in conditions of simulating the physiological parameters of hydrodynamics similar to those used in silico. In general, the results of the simulation are consistent with the quantitative and qualitative data of the hydrodynamic experiment. Thus, in the numerical simulation, a pressure gradient of $3.0 \pm 1.1$ mmHg was obtained, an effective orifice area of $2.8$ cm$^2$, a regurgitation volume of $0.1$ ml/min. The experimental evaluation has shown the similar indicators: $6.5 \pm 3.6$ mmHg, $2.3 \pm 0.6$ cm$^2$, $3.1 \pm 1.7$ ml/min, respectively. The described method demonstrates its promise and can be used in design and research tasks.

Key words: computer simulation, hydrodynamics, prosthetics, computer microtomography.

UDC: 51–76, 616.13–089

Received 21.02.2018, Published 22.08.2018

DOI: 10.17537/2018.13.337



© Steklov Math. Inst. of RAS, 2024