4.4 Article

Analysis of hemodynamic changes from aneurysm inception to large sizes

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cnm.3415

Keywords

aneurysm growth; cerebral aneurysm; evolution; hemodynamics

Funding

  1. NIH Center for Scientific Review [R01NS097457]
  2. Finnish Medical Foundation

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This study analyzed changes in the hemodynamic environment of cerebral aneurysms from initial development to later stages of enlargement. The flow characteristics differed between aneurysms with fixed necks and growing necks, with fixed neck aneurysms potentially evolving towards stable environments faster than aneurysms with growing necks. The findings suggest that the evolution of aneurysm flow characteristics is influenced by neck growth patterns.
While previous studies have identified many risk factors for the progression and rupture of cerebral aneurysms, the changes in aneurysm flow characteristics during its evolution are not fully understood. This work analyzes the changes in the aneurysm hemodynamic environment from its initial development to later stages when the aneurysm has substantially enlarged. A total of 88 aneurysms at four locations were studied with image based computational fluid dynamics (CFD). Two synthetic sequences representing the aneurysm geometry at three earlier stages were generated by shrinking the aneurysm sac while keeping the neck fixed or shrinking the neck simultaneously. The flow conditions were then quantitatively compared between these two modes of evolution. As aneurysms enlarged, the inflow rate increased in growing neck sequences, but decreased in fixed neck sequences. The inflow jet became more concentrated in both sequences. The mean aneurysm flow velocity and wall shear stress decreased in both sequences, but they decreased faster in enlarging aneurysms if the neck was fixed. Additionally, the intra-aneurysmal flows became more complex and more unstable, wall shear stress distribution became more oscillatory, and the area under low wall shear stress increased for both sequences. The evolution of flow characteristics of aneurysms with fixed and growing necks are different. The observed trends suggest that fixed neck aneurysms may evolve towards a flow environment characteristic of stable aneurysms faster than aneurysms with growing necks, which could also evolve towards a more disfavorable environment.

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