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Issue title: Workshop: Breaking Symmetry in Haemodynamics, London, UK, 23–24 April 2001
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Laganà, K.; | Dubini, G. | Migliavacca, F. | Pietrabissa, R. | Pennati, G. | Veneziani, A. | Quarteroni, A.;
Affiliations: Bioengineering Department and Laboratory of Biological Structure Mechanics, Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy | Structural Engineering Department and Laboratory of Biological Structure Mechanics, Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy | Mathematics Department “F. Brieschi” and MOX‐Modeling and Scientific Computing, Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy | IMA and Inst. Bernoulli, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
Note: [] Address for correspondence: Katia Laganà, LaBS – Laboratory of Biological Structure Mechanics, Dipartimento di Bioingegneria, Politecnico di Milano, Piazza Leonardo da Vinci, 32, 20133 Milano, Italy. Tel.: +39.02.2399.4283; Fax: +39.02.2399.4286; E‐mail: lagana@biomed.polimi.it.
Abstract: This work was motivated by the problems of analysing detailed 3D models of vascular districts with complex anatomy. It suggests an approach to prescribing realistic boundary conditions to use in order to obtain information on local as well as global haemodynamics. A method was developed which simultaneously solves Navier–Stokes equations for local information and a non‐linear system of ordinary differential equations for global information. This is based on the principle that an anatomically detailed 3D model of a cardiovascular district can be achieved by using the finite element method. In turn the finite element method requires a specific boundary condition set. The approach outlined in this work is to include the system of ordinary differential equations in the boundary condition set. Such a multiscale approach was first applied to two controls: (i) a 3D model of a straight tube in a simple hydraulic network and (ii) a 3D model of a straight coronary vessel in a lumped‐parameter model of the cardiovascular system. The results obtained are very close to the solutions available for the pipe geometry. This paper also presents preliminary results from the application of the methodology to a particular haemodynamic problem: namely the fluid dynamics of a systemic‐to‐pulmonary shunt in paediatric cardiac surgery.
Keywords: Computational fluid dynamics, paediatric cardiac surgery
Journal: Biorheology, vol. 39, no. 3-4, pp. 359-364, 2002
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