4.7 Article

In vitro characterization of solute transport in the spinal canal

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0150158

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This paper presents experimental results on solute transport in a simplified model of the spinal canal, providing a deeper understanding of drug dispersion in intrathecal drug delivery procedures. The model consists of an annular channel with a rigid transparent tube representing the dura mater and a compliant insert representing the spinal cord. Laser induced fluorescence is used to characterize solute dispersion along the canal and into the cranial cavity. The study confirms the existence of a steady bulk flow that plays a key role in solute transport along the spinal canal.
This paper presents results of an experimental investigation of solute transport in a simplified model of the spinal canal. The work aims to provide increased understanding of the mechanisms responsible for drug dispersion in intrathecal drug delivery (ITDD) procedures. The model consists of an annular channel bounded externally by a rigid transparent tube of circular section, representing the dura mater, and internally by an eccentric cylindrical compliant insert, representing the spinal cord. The tube, closed at one end, is connected to a rigid acrylic reservoir, representing the cranial cavity. The system is filled with water, whose properties are almost identical to those of the cerebrospinal fluid. A programmable peristaltic pump is employed to generate oscillatory motion at frequencies that are representative of those induced by the cardiac and respiratory cycles. Laser induced fluorescence is used to characterize the dispersion of fluorescent dye along the canal and into the cranial cavity for different values of the relevant Womersley number and different eccentricities of the annular section. The present work corroborates experimentally, for the first time, the existence of a steady bulk flow, associated with the mean Lagrangian motion, which plays a key role in the transport of the solute along the spinal canal. The measurements of solute dispersion are found to be in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions obtained using a simplified transport equation derived earlier on the basis of a two-timescale asymptotic analysis. The experimental results underscore the importance of the eccentricity and its variations along the canal and identifies changes in the flow topology associated with differences in the Womersley number, with potential implications in guiding future designs of ITDD protocols.

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