Validation of CFD simulation results in case of portal vein blood flow

Conference proceedings article


Authors/Editors


Research Areas

No matching items found.


Publication Details

Author list: Botar CC, Vasile T, Sfrangeu S, Clichici S, Agachi PS, Badea R, Mircea P, Cristea MV

Publisher: Elsevier: Monograph Series

Place: AMSTERDAM

Publication year: 2010

Journal: Computer Aided Chemical Engineering (1570-7946)

Journal acronym: COMPUT-AIDED CHEM EN

Volume number: 28

Start page: 205

End page: 210

Number of pages: 6

eISBN: 978-0-444-53569-6

ISSN: 1570-7946

Languages: English-Great Britain (EN-GB)


View in Web of Science | View citing articles in Web of Science


Abstract

Promising applications such as disease research and medical diagnostic, where fluid mechanical conditions are correlated to regions prone to different pathologies represented during the time the driving force to study the blood flow and its relation with the vessels walls in the human circulatory system. The hemodymanics simulation studies have been frequently used to gain a better understanding of functional, diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of the blood flow. Therefore a precise quantification of the blood flow in vessels could constitute a strong basis for diagnosis, prediction or evolution estimation of blood vessels or associated organ diseases. Due to the fact that many fundamental issues of the blood flow, like phenomena associated with pressure and viscous forces fields, are still not fully understood or entirely described through mathematical formulations the characterization of blood flow is still a challenging task. The computational modeling of the blood flow and mechanical interactions that strongly affect the blood flow patterns, based on medical data and imaging represent the most accurate analysis of the blood flow complex behavior. But, in order to represent a valuable non-invasive tool capable to provide comprehensive insights of the overall phenomena taking place at the most intimate level inside the sanguine vessels and which could serve to medical purposes the computational modeling of the blood flow needs accurate validation.In the present paper the mathematical modeling of the blood flow in the portal vein has been addressed, the computational fluid dynamic (CFD) technique has been used and the model simulation results have been validated using in vivo Echo-Doppler measurements.


Keywords

Blood flow, flow/vessel wall interaction, results validation


Documents

No matching items found.


Last updated on 2021-07-05 at 03:57