M. Lei et al., HEMODYNAMIC SIMULATIONS AND COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGNS OF GRAFT-ARTERY JUNCTIONS, Journal of biomechanical engineering, 119(3), 1997, pp. 343-348
Severe occlusion of graft-artery junctions due to restenosis, e.g., ex
cessive tissue overgrowth and renewed plaque formation, may occur with
in a few months or years after bypass surgery. Our hypothesis is that
nonuniform hemodynamics, represented by large sustained wall shear str
ess gradients, trigger-abnormal biological processes leading to rapid
restenosis and hence early graft failure. In turn, this problem may be
significantly mitigated by designing graft-artery bypass configuratio
ns for which the wall shear stress gradient (WSSG) is approximately ze
ro and hence nearly uniform hemodynamics are achieved focusing on the
distal end of several femoral artery bypass junctions, a validated fin
ite volume code has been used to compute the transient three-dimension
al velocity vector fields and its first and second surface derivatives
in order to test the idea. Specifically, it is shown that the Taylor
patch, which generates higher patency rates than standard end-to-side
anastomoses, exhibits lower WSSG levels than standard configurations,
and that further geometric design improvements reduce the WSSG in magn
itude and local extent even more.