Tese: Analysis of the blood flow during the cardiac cycle in the ascending aorta
Aluno(a) : Enrico Luigi Moreira PeroccoOrientador(a): Angela Nieckele e Ivan Aguilar
Área de Concentração: Termociências
Data: 15/09/2022
Link para tese/dissertação: https://doi.org/10.17771/PUCRio.acad.61123
Resumo: Cardiovascular diseases are responsible for a high number of deaths in humans. Many of these pathologies are dependent on the cardiac cycle and are located in the aorta, the largest and main artery in our body. Knowledge of flow patterns and stress distributions in the walls of the aorta can help in the diagnosis and prevention of some of these diseases. Thus, the flow of blood during the cardiac cycle was numerically studied in a 3D model of the aorta of a specific patient, after TAVI (Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation) implantation. The cardiac cycle consists of two periods called systole and diastole. During the systole, blood is pumped from the heart to the aorta, presenting high flow rates, resulting in a turbulent flow. On the other hand, in diastole, with the closure of the aortic valve, the blood flows with low velocities in laminar regime. Until today, scientists face a challenge in turbulence modeling, as there is no single model that provides predictability for all situations involving the turbulent regime, with reasonable computational effort. In order to select the most suitable turbulence model for the analysis of the flow inside the aorta, in the presence of the transition of flow regimes during the cardiac cycle, with a reasonable cost, the methodology based on the Reynolds Average was selected. Different models were compared with experimental data extracted from the same real-scale aortic model, but a in steady state, with flow corresponding to the systolic peak. Finally, the impact of boundary conditions and turbulence models during the cardiac cycle on the distribution and values of stresses and turbulent quantities in the vascular endothelium were evaluated. It was shown that the spatial distribution of the temporal averages of tension was qualitatively and quantitatively similar, for the two cardiac cycles representative of different patients, but with small local changes for each case. In terms of turbulence models, it was observed that the SAS (Scale Adaptive Simulation) model was able to represent the relaminarization of blood flow in the diastolic period.