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Title of Journal: Cardiovasc Eng Tech

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Abbravation: Cardiovascular Engineering and Technology

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Springer US

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DOI

10.1002/nadc.200747897

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1869-4098

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Fluid Mechanics of Mixing in the Vertebrobasilar S

Authors: Matthew D Bockman Akash P Kansagra Shawn C Shadden Eric C Wong Alison L Marsden
Publish Date: 2012/11/07
Volume: 3, Issue: 4, Pages: 450-461
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Abstract

Recent magnetic resonance imaging MRI studies have demonstrated that perfusion to the posterior fossa of the brain can be surprisingly unilateral with specific vascular territories supplied largely by a single vertebral artery VA rather than a mixture of the two It has been hyposthesized that this is due to a lack of mixing in the confluence of the VA into the basilar artery BA however the local mechanisms of mixing or lack thereof have not been previously examined in detail This study aims to assess the mixing characteristics and hemodynamics of the vertebrobasilar junction using subject specific computational fluid dynamics CFD simulations and perform quantitative comparisons to arterial spin labeling ASL MRI measurements Subject specific CFD simulations and unsteady particle tracking were performed to quantitatively evaluate vertebrobasilar mixing in four subjects Phasecontrast MRI was used to assign inflow boundary conditions A direct comparison of the fractional flow contributions from the VAs was performed against perfusion maps generated via vesselencoded pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling VEPCASL MRI The laterality of VA blood supply in 7/8 simulated cerebellar hemispheres and 5/7 simulated cerebral hemispheres agree with ASL data Whole brain laterality of the VA supply agrees within 5 for measured and computed values for all patients However agreement is not as strong when comparing perfusion to individual regions Simulations were able to accurately predict laterality of VA blood supply in four regions of interest and confirm ASL results showing that very little mixing occurs at the vertebrobasilar confluence Additional particle tracking analysis using Lagrangian coherent structures is used to augment these findings and provides further physical insight that complements current in vivo imaging techniques A quantitative mixnorm measure was used to compare results and sensitivity analysis was performed to assess changes in the results with pertubations in the boundary condition valuesSupport for this work was provided by a Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Award at the Scientific Interface a UCSD Collaboratories Grant and NIH grant R01EB002096 The authors gratefully acknowledge the use of software from the Simvascular open source project simtkorg and the convectiondiffusion code written by Mahdi Esmaily Moghadam


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