It is well known that atherosclerosis occurs at very specific locations throughout the human vasculature, such as arterial bifurcations and bends, all of which are subjected to low wall shear stress. A key player in the pathology of atherosclerosis is the endothelium, controlling the passage of material to and from the artery wall. Endothelial dysfunction refers to the condition where the normal regulation of processes by the endothelium is diminished. In this paper, the blood flow and transport of the low diffusion coefficient species adenosine triphosphate (ATP) are investigated in a variety of arterial geometries: a bifurcation with varying inner angle, and an artery bend. A mathematical model of endothelial calcium and endothelial nitric oxide synthase cellular dynamics is used to investigate spatial variations in the physiology of the endothelium. This model allows assessment of regions of the artery wall deficient in nitric oxide (NO). The models here aim to determine whether 3D flow fields are important in determining ATP concentration and endothelial function. For ATP transport, the effects of a coronary and carotid wave form on mass transport is investigated for low Womersley number. For the carotid, the Womersley number is then increased to determine whether this is an important factor. The results show that regions of low wall shear stress correspond with regions of impaired endothetial nitric oxide synthase signaling, therefore reduced availability of NO. However, experimental work is required to determine if this level is significant. The results also suggest that bifurcation angle is an important factor and acute angle bifurcations are more susceptible to disease than large angle bifurcations. It has been evidenced that complex 3D flow fields play an important role in determining signaling within endothelial cells. Furthermore, the distribution of ATP in blood is highly dependent on secondary flow features. The models here use ATP concentration simulated under steady conditions. This has been evidenced to reproduce essential features of time-averaged ATP concentration over a cardiac cycle for small Womersley numbers. However, when the Womersley number is increased, some differences are observed. Transient variations are overall insignificant, suggesting that spatial variation is more important than temporal. It has been determined that acute angle bifurcations are potentially more susceptible to atherogenesis and steady-state ATP transport reproduces essential features of time-averaged pulsatile transport for small Womersley number. Larger Womersley numbers appear to be an important factor in time-dependent mass transfer.
Skip Nav Destination
e-mail: tim.david@canterbury.ac.nz
Article navigation
February 2008
Research Papers
Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase and Calcium Production in Arterial Geometries: An Integrated Fluid Mechanics/Cell Model
A. Comerford,
A. Comerford
Centre for Bioengineering,
University of Canterbury
, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand
Search for other works by this author on:
M. J. Plank,
M. J. Plank
Centre for Bioengineering,
University of Canterbury
, Christchurch, New Zealand; Department of Mathematics, University of Canterbury
, Christchurch, New Zealand
Search for other works by this author on:
T. David
T. David
Centre for Bioengineering,
e-mail: tim.david@canterbury.ac.nz
University of Canterbury
, Christchurch, New Zealand
Search for other works by this author on:
A. Comerford
Centre for Bioengineering,
University of Canterbury
, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand
M. J. Plank
Centre for Bioengineering,
University of Canterbury
, Christchurch, New Zealand; Department of Mathematics, University of Canterbury
, Christchurch, New Zealand
T. David
Centre for Bioengineering,
University of Canterbury
, Christchurch, New Zealande-mail: tim.david@canterbury.ac.nz
J Biomech Eng. Feb 2008, 130(1): 011010 (13 pages)
Published Online: February 11, 2008
Article history
Received:
April 10, 2006
Revised:
May 14, 2007
Published:
February 11, 2008
Citation
Comerford, A., Plank, M. J., and David, T. (February 11, 2008). "Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase and Calcium Production in Arterial Geometries: An Integrated Fluid Mechanics/Cell Model." ASME. J Biomech Eng. February 2008; 130(1): 011010. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2838026
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
A New Dissipation Function to Model the Rate-Dependent Mechanical Behavior of Semilunar Valve Leaflets
J Biomech Eng (July 2023)
Muscle Constitutive Model With a Tangent Modulus Approximation: Ansys Implementation and Verification
J Biomech Eng (July 2023)
Related Articles
Particle-Hemodynamics Simulations and Design Options for Surgical Reconstruction of Diseased Carotid Artery Bifurcations
J Biomech Eng (April,2004)
Vascular Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 Expression in Endothelial Cells Exposed to Physiological Coronary Wall Shear Stresses
J Biomech Eng (August,2009)
The Role of Mass Balance Equations in Growth Mechanics Illustrated in Surface and Volume Dissolutions
J Biomech Eng (January,2011)
A Porous Media Approach for Bifurcating Flow and Mass Transfer in a Human Lung
J. Heat Transfer (October,2009)
Related Chapters
Laminar Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer
Applications of Mathematical Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow Models in Engineering and Medicine
Dynamic Behavior in a Singular Delayed Bioeconomic Model
International Conference on Instrumentation, Measurement, Circuits and Systems (ICIMCS 2011)
Two-Dimension Simulation of a Red Blood Cell Partitioning in Microvascular Bifurcation
International Conference on Software Technology and Engineering (ICSTE 2012)