Assessment of extracranial carotid artery disease using digital twins – A pilot study

•We present a workflow to assess the severity of carotid stenosis by digital twinning.•Computed metrics showed good agreement with Doppler ultrasound measurements.•Hyperemic simulations over carotid stenoses in a physiological range proved feasible.•Digital twins may help in the development of bioma...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage clinical 2023-01, Vol.38, p.103435-103435, Article 103435
Hauptverfasser: Dubs, Linus, Charitatos, Vasileios, Buoso, Stefano, Wegener, Susanne, Winklhofer, Sebastian, Alkadhi, Hatem, Kurtcuoglu, Vartan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We present a workflow to assess the severity of carotid stenosis by digital twinning.•Computed metrics showed good agreement with Doppler ultrasound measurements.•Hyperemic simulations over carotid stenoses in a physiological range proved feasible.•Digital twins may help in the development of biomarkers for stenosis assessment. To improve risk stratification in extracranial internal carotid artery disease (CAD), patients who would benefit maximally from revascularization must be identified. In cardiology, the fractional flow reserve (FFR) has become a reference standard for evaluating the functional severity of coronary artery stenosis, and noninvasive surrogates thereof relying on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) have been developed. Here, we present a CFD-based workflow using digital twins of patients’ carotid bifurcations derived from computed tomography angiography for the noninvasive functional assessment of CAD. We reconstructed patient-specific digital twins of 37 carotid bifurcations. We implemented a CFD model using common carotid artery peak systolic velocity (PSV) acquired with Doppler ultrasound (DUS) as inlet boundary condition and a two-element Windkessel model as oulet boundary condition. The agreement between CFD and DUS on the PSV in the internal carotid artery (ICA) was then compared. The relative error for the agreement between DUS and CFD was 9% ± 20% and the intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.88. Furthermore, hyperemic simulations in a physiological range were feasible and unmasked markedly different pressure drops along two ICA stenoses with similar degree of narrowing under comparable ICA blood flow. Hereby, we lay the foundation for prospective studies on noninvasive CFD-based derivation of metrics similar to the FFR for the assessment of CAD.
ISSN:2213-1582
2213-1582
DOI:10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103435