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Hemodynamics of thrombus formation in intracranial aneurysms: An in silico observational study

Authors :
Qiongyao Liu
Ali Sarrami-Foroushani
Yongxing Wang
Michael MacRaild
Christopher Kelly
Fengming Lin
Yan Xia
Shuang Song
Nishant Ravikumar
Tufail Patankar
Zeike A. Taylor
Toni Lassila
Alejandro F. Frangi
Source :
APL Bioengineering, Vol 7, Iss 3, Pp 036102-036102-10 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
AIP Publishing LLC, 2023.

Abstract

How prevalent is spontaneous thrombosis in a population containing all sizes of intracranial aneurysms? How can we calibrate computational models of thrombosis based on published data? How does spontaneous thrombosis differ in normo- and hypertensive subjects? We address the first question through a thorough analysis of published datasets that provide spontaneous thrombosis rates across different aneurysm characteristics. This analysis provides data for a subgroup of the general population of aneurysms, namely, those of large and giant size (>10 mm). Based on these observed spontaneous thrombosis rates, our computational modeling platform enables the first in silico observational study of spontaneous thrombosis prevalence across a broader set of aneurysm phenotypes. We generate 109 virtual patients and use a novel approach to calibrate two trigger thresholds: residence time and shear rate, thus addressing the second question. We then address the third question by utilizing this calibrated model to provide new insight into the effects of hypertension on spontaneous thrombosis. We demonstrate how a mechanistic thrombosis model calibrated on an intracranial aneurysm cohort can help estimate spontaneous thrombosis prevalence in a broader aneurysm population. This study is enabled through a fully automatic multi-scale modeling pipeline. We use the clinical spontaneous thrombosis data as an indirect population-level validation of a complex computational modeling framework. Furthermore, our framework allows exploration of the influence of hypertension in spontaneous thrombosis. This lays the foundation for in silico clinical trials of cerebrovascular devices in high-risk populations, e.g., assessing the performance of flow diverters in aneurysms for hypertensive patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24732877
Volume :
7
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
APL Bioengineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2a390c65b52445b0b510b53bdc1b5297
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0144848