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Abstract There is a growing research interest in quantifying blood flow distribution for the entire cerebral circulation to sharpen diagnosis and improve treatment options for cerebrovascular disease of individual patients. We present a methodology to reconstruct subject‐specific cerebral blood flow patterns in accordance with physiological and fluid mechanical principles and optimally informed byin vivoneuroimage data of cerebrovascular anatomy and arterial blood flow rates. We propose an inverse problem to infer blood flow distribution across the visible portion of the arterial network that best matches subject‐specific anatomy and a given set of volumetric flow measurements. The optimization technique also mitigates the effect of uncertainties by reconciling incomplete flow data and by dissipating unavoidable acquisition errors associated with medical imaging data.more » « less
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Magnetophoresis is an important physical process with application to drug delivery, biomedical imaging, separation, and mixing. Other than empirically, little is known about how the magnetic field and magnetic properties of a solution affect the flux of magnetic particles. A comprehensive explanation of these effects on the transport of magnetic particles has not been developed yet. Here we formulate a consistent, constitutive equation for the magnetophoretic flux of magnetic nanoparticles suspended in a medium exposed to a stationary magnetic field. The constitutive relationship accounts for contributions from magnetic diffusion, magnetic convection, residual magnetization, and electromagnetic drift. We discovered that the key physical properties governing the magnetophoresis are magnetic diffusion coefficient, magnetic velocity, and activity coefficient, which depend on relative magnetic energy and the molar magnetic susceptibility of particles. The constitutive equation also reveals previously unknown ballistic and diffusive limits for magnetophoresis wherein the paramagnetic particles either aggregate near the magnet or diffusive away from the magnet, respectively. In the diffusive limit, the particle concentration is linearly proportional to the relative magnetic energy of the suspension of paramagnetic particles. The region of the localization of paramagnetic particles near the magnet decreases with increasing the strength of the magnet. The dynamic accumulation of nanoparticles, measured as the thickness of the nanoparticle aggregate, near the magnet compares well with the theoretical prediction. The effect of convective mixing on the rate of magnetophoresis is also discussed for the magnetic targeting applications.more » « less
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Recent advances in modeling oxygen supply to cortical brain tissue have begun to elucidate the functional mechanisms of neurovascular coupling. While the principal mechanisms of blood flow regulation after neuronal firing are generally known, mechanistic hemodynamic simulations cannot yet pinpoint the exact spatial and temporal coordination between the network of arteries, arterioles, capillaries and veins for the entire brain. Because of the potential significance of blood flow and oxygen supply simulations for illuminating spatiotemporal regulation inside the cortical microanatomy, there is a need to create mathematical models of the entire cerebral circulation with realistic anatomical detail. Our hypothesis is that an anatomically accurate reconstruction of the cerebrocirculatory architecture will inform about possible regulatory mechanisms of the neurovascular interface. In this article, we introduce large-scale networks of the murine cerebral circulation spanning the Circle of Willis, main cerebral arteries connected to the pial network down to the microcirculation in the capillary bed. Several multiscale models were generated from state-of-the-art neuroimaging data. Using a vascular network construction algorithm, the entire circulation of the middle cerebral artery was synthesized. Blood flow simulations indicate a consistent trend of higher hematocrit in deeper cortical layers, while surface layers with shorter vascular path lengths seem to carry comparatively lower red blood cell (RBC) concentrations. Moreover, the variability of RBC flux decreases with cortical depth. These results support the notion that plasma skimming serves a self-regulating function for maintaining uniform oxygen perfusion to neurons irrespective of their location in the blood supply hierarchy. Our computations also demonstrate the practicality of simulating blood flow for large portions of the mouse brain with existing computer resources. The efficient simulation of blood flow throughout the entire middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory is a promising milestone towards the final aim of predicting blood flow patterns for the entire brain.more » « less
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