4.4 Article

Variational data assimilation for transient blood flow simulations: Cerebral aneurysms as an illustrative example

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cnm.3152

Keywords

adjoint equations; blood flow; finite element method; Navier-Stokes; optimal control; variational data assimilation

Funding

  1. Norges Forskningsrad [179578, 251237]
  2. Universitetet i Oslo [NOTUR NN9279K, NOTUR NN9316K]

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Several cardiovascular diseases are caused from localised abnormal blood flow such as in the case of stenosis or aneurysms. Prevailing theories propose that the development is caused by abnormal wall shear stress in focused areas. Computational fluid mechanics have arisen as a promising tool for a more precise and quantitative analysis, in particular because the anatomy is often readily available even by standard imaging techniques such as magnetic resonance and computed tomography angiography. However, computational fluid mechanics rely on accurate initial and boundary conditions, which are difficult to obtain. In this paper, we address the problem of recovering high-resolution information from noisy and low-resolution physical measurements of blood flow (for example, from phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging [PC-MRI]) using variational data assimilation based on a transient Navier-Stokes model. Numerical experiments are performed in both 3D (2D space and time) and 4D (3D space and time) and with pulsatile flow relevant for physiological flow in cerebral aneurysms. The results demonstrate that, with suitable regularisation, the model accurately reconstructs flow, even in the presence of significant noise.

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