by Róbert Bordás, Santhosh Seshadhri, Gabor Janiga, Martin Skalej, Dominique Thevenin
Abstract:
The treatment of cerebral aneurysms, found in roughly 5\% of the population and associated in case of rupture to a high mortality rate, is a major challenge for neurosurgery and neuroradiology due to the complexity of the intervention and to the resulting, high hazard ratio. Improvements are possible but require a better understanding of the associated, unsteady blood flow patterns in complex 3D geometries. It would be very useful to carry out such studies using suitable numerical models, if it is proven that they reproduce accurately enough the real conditions. This validation step is classically based on comparisons with measured data. Since in vivo measurements are extremely difficult and therefore of limited accuracy, complementary model-based investigations considering realistic configurations are essential. In the present study, simulations based on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) have been compared with in situ , laser-Doppler velocimetry (LDV) measurements in the phantom model of a cerebral aneurysm. The employed 1:1 model is made from transparent silicone. A liquid mixture composed of water, glycerin, xanthan gum and sodium chloride has been specifically adapted for the present investigation. It shows physical flow properties similar to real blood and leads to a refraction index perfectly matched to that of the silicone model, allowing accurate optical measurements of the flow velocity. For both experiments and simulations, complex pulsatile flow waveforms and flow rates were accounted for. This finally allows a direct, quantitative comparison between measurements and simulations. In this manner, the accuracy of the employed computational model can be checked.
Reference:
Experimental validation of numerical simulations on a cerebral aneurysm phantom model (Róbert Bordás, Santhosh Seshadhri, Gabor Janiga, Martin Skalej, Dominique Thevenin), In Interventional Medicine and Applied Science, volume 4, 2012.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{bordas_experimental_2012,
title = {Experimental validation of numerical simulations on a cerebral aneurysm phantom model},
volume = {4},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/IMAS.4.2012.4.4},
doi = {10.1556/IMAS.4.2012.4.4},
abstract = {The treatment of cerebral aneurysms, found in roughly 5\% of the population and associated in case of rupture to a high mortality rate, is a major challenge for neurosurgery and neuroradiology due to the complexity of the intervention and to the resulting, high hazard ratio. Improvements are possible but require a better understanding of the associated, unsteady blood flow patterns in complex 3D geometries. It would be very useful to carry out such studies using suitable numerical models, if it is proven that they reproduce accurately enough the real conditions. This validation step is classically based on comparisons with measured data. Since in vivo measurements are extremely difficult and therefore of limited accuracy, complementary model-based investigations considering realistic configurations are essential. In the present study, simulations based on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) have been compared with in situ , laser-Doppler velocimetry (LDV) measurements in the phantom model of a cerebral aneurysm. The employed 1:1 model is made from transparent silicone. A liquid mixture composed of water, glycerin, xanthan gum and sodium chloride has been specifically adapted for the present investigation. It shows physical flow properties similar to real blood and leads to a refraction index perfectly matched to that of the silicone model, allowing accurate optical measurements of the flow velocity. For both experiments and simulations, complex pulsatile flow waveforms and flow rates were accounted for. This finally allows a direct, quantitative comparison between measurements and simulations. In this manner, the accuracy of the employed computational model can be checked.},
number = {4},
journal = {Interventional Medicine and Applied Science},
author = {Bordás, Róbert and Seshadhri, Santhosh and Janiga, Gabor and Skalej, Martin and Thevenin, Dominique},
month = dec,
year = {2012},
pages = {193--205}
}