Back to Search Start Over

The effect of oral and nasal breathing on the deposition of inhaled particles in upper and tracheobronchial airways.

Authors :
Lizal, Frantisek
Elcner, Jakub
Jedelsky, Jan
Maly, Milan
Jicha, Miroslav
Farkas, Árpád
Belka, Miloslav
Rehak, Zdenek
Adam, Jan
Brinek, Adam
Laznovsky, Jakub
Zikmund, Tomas
Kaiser, Jozef
Source :
Journal of Aerosol Science. Dec2020, Vol. 150, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The inhalation route has a substantial influence on the fate of inhaled particles. An outbreak of infectious diseases such as COVID-19, influenza or tuberculosis depends on the site of deposition of the inhaled pathogens. But the knowledge of respiratory deposition is important also for occupational safety or targeted delivery of inhaled pharmaceuticals. Simulations utilizing computational fluid dynamics are becoming available to a wide spectrum of users and they can undoubtedly bring detailed predictions of regional deposition of particles. However, if those simulations are to be trusted, they must be validated by experimental data. This article presents simulations and experiments performed on a geometry of airways which is available to other users and thus those results can be used for intercomparison between different research groups. In particular, three hypotheses were tested. First: Oral breathing and combined breathing are equivalent in terms of particle deposition in TB airways, as the pressure resistance of the nasal cavity is so high that the inhaled aerosol flows mostly through the oral cavity in both cases. Second: The influence of the inhalation route (nasal, oral or combined) on the regional distribution of the deposited particles downstream of the trachea is negligible. Third: Simulations can accurately and credibly predict deposition hotspots. The maximum spatial resolution of predicted deposition achievable by current methods was searched for. The simulations were performed using large-eddy simulation, the flow measurements were done by laser Doppler anemometry and the deposition has been measured by positron emission tomography in a realistic replica of human airways. Limitations and sources of uncertainties of the experimental methods were identified. The results confirmed that the high-pressure resistance of the nasal cavity leads to practically identical velocity profiles, even above the glottis for the mouth, and combined mouth and nose breathing. The distribution of deposited particles downstream of the trachea was not influenced by the inhalation route. The carina of the first bifurcation was not among the main deposition hotspots regardless of the inhalation route or flow rate. On the other hand, the deposition hotspots were identified by both CFD and experiments in the second bifurcation in both lungs, and to a lesser extent also in both the third bifurcations in the left lung. • Limits of current methods in prediction of flow and high-resolution deposition in an airway geometry were investigated. • Experiments and simulations performed on a replica of airways - nasal and oral cavity and seven generations of TB branching. • The influence of the inhalation route on the flow field was negligible downstream of the glottis. • The carina of the first bifurcation was not among the main deposition hotspots regardless of the inhalation route. • Deposition hotspots identified in the second bifurcation in both lungs, and in both third bifurcations in the left lung. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00218502
Volume :
150
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Aerosol Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146480364
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaerosci.2020.105649