Red blood cell dynamics in extravascular biological tissues modelled as canonical disordered porous media

Zhou, Qi and Schirrmann, Kerstin and Doman, Eleanor and Chen, Qi and Singh, Naval and Selvaganapathy, P. Ravi and Bernabeu, Miguel O. and Jensen, Oliver E. and Juel, Anne and Chernyavsky, Igor L. and Krüger, Timm (2022) Red blood cell dynamics in extravascular biological tissues modelled as canonical disordered porous media. Interface Focus, 12 (6). ISSN 2042-8898

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract

The dynamics of blood flow in the smallest vessels and passages of the human body, where the cellular character of blood becomes prominent, plays a dominant role in the transport and exchange of solutes. Recent studies have revealed that the microhaemodynamics of a vascular network is underpinned by its interconnected structure, and certain structural alterations such as capillary dilation and blockage can substantially change blood flow patterns. However, for extravascular media with disordered microstructure (e.g. the porous intervillous space in the placenta), it remains unclear how the medium’s structure affects the haemodynamics. Here, we simulate cellular blood flow in simple models of canonical porous media representative of extravascular biological tissue, with corroborative microfluidic experiments performed for validation purposes. For the media considered here, we observe three main effects: first, the relative apparent viscosity of blood increases with the structural disorder of the medium; second, the presence of red blood cells (RBCs) dynamically alters the flow distribution in the medium; third, symmetry breaking introduced by moderate structural disorder can promote more homogeneous distribution of RBCs. Our findings contribute to a better understanding of the cell-scale haemodynamics that mediates the relationship linking the function of certain biological tissues to their microstructure.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Interface Focus
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1300/1304
Subjects:
?? biophysicsbiotechnologybiomaterialsbiochemistrybiomedical engineeringbioengineering ??
ID Code:
214710
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
15 Feb 2024 09:40
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Feb 2024 09:40