4.4 Article

How patient-specific do internal carotid artery inflow rates need to be for computational fluid dynamics of cerebral aneurysms?

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROINTERVENTIONAL SURGERY
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages 459-464

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2020-015993

Keywords

aneurysm; angiography; blood flow; MRI

Funding

  1. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada [G-16-00012564]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [SNF 32003B 160222, SNF 320030 156813]
  3. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  4. Government of Ontario
  5. Ontario Research Fund -Research Excellence
  6. University of Toronto

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The study tested the impact of relying on generalized inflow rates and found that adjusting the generalized waveform shape with patient-specific Qavg can achieve near-perfect agreement and improve OSI correlations.
Background Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has become a popular tool for studying 'patient-specific' blood flow dynamics in cerebral aneurysms; however, rarely are the inflow boundary conditions patient-specific. We aimed to test the impact of widespread reliance on generalized inflow rates. Methods Internal carotid artery (ICA) flow rates were measured via 2D cine phase-contrast MRI for 24 patients scheduled for endovascular therapy of an ICA aneurysm. CFD models were constructed from 3D rotational angiography, and pulsatile inflow rates imposed as measured by MRI or estimated using an average older-adult ICA flow waveform shape scaled by a cycle-average flow rate (Q(avg)) derived from the patient's ICA cross-sectional area via an assumed inlet velocity. Results There was good overall qualitative agreement in the magnitudes and spatial distributions of time-averaged wall shear stress (TAWSS), oscillatory shear index (OSI), and spectral power index (SPI) using generalized versus patient-specific inflows. Sac-averaged quantities showed moderate to good correlations: R-2=0.54 (TAWSS), 0.80 (OSI), and 0.68 (SPI). Using patient-specific Q(avg) to scale the generalized waveform shape resulted in near-perfect agreement for TAWSS, and reduced bias, but not scatter, for SPI. Patient-specific waveform had an impact only on OSI correlations, which improved to R-2=0.93. Conclusions Aneurysm CFD demonstrates the ability to stratify cases by nominal hemodynamic 'risk' factors when employing an age- and vascular-territory-specific recipe for generalized inflow rates. Q(avg) has a greater influence than waveform shape, suggesting some improvement could be achieved by including measurement of patient-specific Q(avg) into aneurysm imaging protocols.

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