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Variability of computational fluid dynamics solutions for pressure and flow in a giant aneurysm: the ASME 2012 Summer Bioengineering Conference CFD Challenge

Authors :
Steinman, David A.
Yiemeng Hoi
Fahy, Paul
Morris, Liam
Walsh, Michael T
Aristokleous, Nicolas
Anayiotos, Andreas S
Papaharilaou, Yannis
Amirhossein Arzani
Shadden, Shawn C
Berg, Philipp
Janiga, Gábor
Bols, Joris
Segers, Patrick
Bressloff, Neil W
Cibis, Merih
Gijsen, Frank H
Cito, Salvatore
Pallarés, Jordi
Browne, Leonard D
Costelloe, Jennifer A
Lynch, Adrian G
Degroote, Joris
Vierendeels, Jan
Wenyu Fu
Qiao, Aike
Hodis, Simona
Kallmes, David F
Kalsi, Hardeep
Long, Quan
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Figshare, 2018.

Abstract

Stimulated by a recent controversy regarding pressure drops predicted in a giant aneurysm with a proximal stenosis, the present study sought to assess variability in the prediction of pressures and flow by a wide variety of research groups. In phase I, lumen geometry, flow rates, and fluid properties were specified, leaving each research group to choose their solver, discretization, and solution strategies. Variability was assessed by having each group interpolate their results onto a standardized mesh and centerline. For phase II, a physical model of the geometry was constructed, from which pressure and flow rates were measured. Groups repeated their simulations using a geometry reconstructed from a micro-computed tomography (CT) scan of the physical model with the measured flow rates and fluid properties. Phase I results from 25 groups demonstrated remarkable consistency in the pressure patterns, with the majority predicting peak systolic pressure drops within 8% of each other. Aneurysm sac flow patterns were more variable with only a few groups reporting peak systolic flow instabilities owing to their use of high temporal resolutions. Variability for phase II was comparable, and the median predicted pressure drops were within a few millimeters of mercury of the measured values but only after accounting for submillimeter errors in the reconstruction of the life-sized flow model from micro-CT. In summary, pressure can be predicted with consistency by CFD across a wide range of solvers and solution strategies, but this may not hold true for specific flow patterns or derived quantities. Future challenges are needed and should focus on hemodynamic quantities thought to be of clinical interest.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....45362a26dbb9be5bc9aa56b2adf5f32b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1184/r1/6096968.v1