Article

Perfusion effects and hydrodynamics.

Department of Chemical Engineering, 102 Gleeson Hall, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA.
Advances in biochemical engineering/biotechnology (impact factor: 1.64). 02/2007; 103:75-156. pp.75-156
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Biological processes within living systems are significantly influenced by the motion of the liquids and gases to which those tissues are exposed. Accordingly, tissue engineers must not only understand hydrodynamic phenomena, but also appreciate the vital role of those phenomena in cellular and physiologic processes both in vitro and in vivo. In particular, understanding the fundamental principles of fluid flow underlying perfusion effects in the organ-level internal environment and their relation to the cellular microenvironment is essential to successfully mimicking tissue behavior. In this work, the major principles of hemodynamic flow and transport are summarized, to provide readers with a physical understanding of these important issues. In particular, since quantifying hemodynamic events through experiments can require expensive and invasive techniques, the benefits that can be derived from the use of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) packages and neural networking (NN) models are stressed. A capstone illustration based on analysis of the hemodynamics of aortic aneurysms is presented as a representative example of this approach, to stress the importance of tissue responses to flow-induced events.

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Keywords

aortic aneurysms
 
Biological processes
 
capstone illustration
 
cellular microenvironment
 
computational fluid dynamics
 
expensive
 
fluid flow
 
fundamental principles
 
hemodynamic flow
 
hemodynamics
 
major principles
 
mimicking tissue behavior
 
neural networking
 
organ-level internal environment
 
perfusion effects
 
physical understanding
 
quantifying hemodynamic events
 
tissue engineers
 
tissue responses
 
vital role
 

Robert A Peattie