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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Annals of biomedical engineering 18 (1990), S. 685-709 
    ISSN: 1573-9686
    Keywords: Thrombosis ; Transport in flowing blood ; Coagulation cascade ; Modelling thrombogenesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine , Technology
    Notes: Abstract The paper presents a mathematical analysis of the contributions of flow and mass transport to a single reactive event at a blood vessel wall. The intent is to prepare the ground for a comprehensive study of the intertwining of these contributions with the reaction network of the coagulation cascade. We show that in all vessels with local mural activity, or in “large” vessels (d〉0.1 mm) with global reactivity, events at the tubular wall can be rigorously described by algebraic equations under steady conditions, or by ordinary differential forms (ODEs) during transient conditions. this opens up important ways for analyzing the combined roles of flow, transport, and coagulation reactions in thrombosis, a task hitherto considered to be completely intractable. We report extensively on the dependence of transport coefficient kL and mural coagulant concentration Cw on flow, vessel geometry, and reaction kinetics. It is shown that for protein transport, kL varies only weakly with shear rate $$\dot \gamma $$ in large vessels, and not at all in the smaller tubes (d〈10−2 mm). For a typical protein, kL∼10−3 cm s−1 within a factor of 3 in most geometries, irrespective of the mural reaction kinetics. Significant reductions in kL (1/10–1/1,000) leading to high-coagulant accumulation are seen mainly in stagnant zones vicinal to abrupt expansions and in small elliptical tubules. This is in accord with known physical observations. More unexpected are the dramatic increases in accumulation which can come about through the intervention of an autocatalytic reaction step, with Cw rising sharply toward infinity as the ratio of reaction to transport coefficient approaches unity. Such self-catalyzed reactions have the ability to act as powerful amplifiers of an otherwise modest influence of flow and transport on coagulant concentration. The paper considers as well the effect on mass transport of transient conditions occasioned by coagulation initiation or pulsatile flow. During initiation, instantaneous flux varies with diffusivity and bulk concentration, favouring the early adsorption/consumption of proteins with the highest abundance and mobility. This is akin to the ‘Vroman effect’ seen in narrow, stagnant spaces. The effect of flow pulsatility on kL has the potential, after prolonged cycling, of bringing about segregation or accumulation of proteins, with consequences for the coagulation process.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Annals of biomedical engineering 22 (1994), S. 184-193 
    ISSN: 1573-9686
    Keywords: Mathematical model ; Factor XII ; Kallikrein ; HMWK ; Cascade ; Mass transfer
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine , Technology
    Notes: Abstract This work analyzes, for the first time, the combined role of blood flow, protein transport and the reaction network of the contact phase up to the “common pathway” of the blood coagulation cascade. The model is comprised of a set of 20 dominant reactions with 11 components. Systems of ODEs reducible to 4 coupled equations describe rigorously the dynamic behavior, while systems of algebraic equations, reducible to a single polynomial equation, model the steady state concentrations of the coagulants. The analysis showed that there is never more than onestable steady state. This is in contrast to the analysis of common pathway that gives rise to multiple concentration states. It also revealed a general robustness of the system to changes in procoagulant concentrations, inhibition rates and most activation rate constants. The system is largely impervious to the level of activated Factor XII, given that a trace (non-zero) level is present. In contrast, the system displays a dual response to flow and surface activity: A change in either of these factors alone can promote, have no effect on, or (in the case of flow) impede the progress of coagulation, depending on the value of the other factor. Their effects must therefore be examined in unison. These results may help resolve contradictory findings attributed to one or the other factor alone.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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