{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Validation of ultrasound velocimetry and computational fluid dynamics for flow assessment in femoral artery stenotic disease. {Author}: van de Velde L;van Helvert M;Engelhard S;Ghanbarzadeh-Dagheyan A;Mirgolbabaee H;Voorneveld J;Lajoinie G;Versluis M;Reijnen MMPJ;Groot Jebbink E; {Journal}: J Med Imaging (Bellingham) {Volume}: 11 {Issue}: 3 {Year}: 2024 May 暂无{DOI}: 10.1117/1.JMI.11.3.037001 {Abstract}: UNASSIGNED: To investigate the accuracy of high-framerate echo particle image velocimetry (ePIV) and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) for determining velocity vectors in femoral bifurcation models through comparison with optical particle image velocimetry (oPIV).
UNASSIGNED: Separate femoral bifurcation models were built for oPIV and ePIV measurements of a non-stenosed (control) and a 75%-area stenosed common femoral artery. A flow loop was used to create triphasic pulsatile flow. In-plane velocity vectors were measured with oPIV and ePIV. Flow was simulated with CFD using boundary conditions from ePIV and additional duplex-ultrasound (DUS) measurements. Mean differences and 95%-limits of agreement (1.96*SD) of the velocity magnitudes in space and time were compared, and the similarity of vector complexity (VC) and time-averaged wall shear stress (TAWSS) was assessed.
UNASSIGNED: Similar flow features were observed between modalities with velocities up to 110 and 330  cm/s in the control and the stenosed model, respectively. Relative to oPIV, ePIV and CFD-ePIV showed negligible mean differences in velocity (<3  cm/s), with limits of agreement of ±25  cm/s (control) and ±34  cm/s (stenosed). CFD-DUS overestimated velocities with limits of agreements of 13±40 and 16.1±55  cm/s for the control and stenosed model, respectively. VC showed good agreement, whereas TAWSS showed similar trends but with higher values for ePIV, CFD-DUS, and CFD-ePIV compared to oPIV.
UNASSIGNED: EPIV and CFD-ePIV can accurately measure complex flow features in the femoral bifurcation and around a stenosis. CFD-DUS showed larger deviations in velocities making it a less robust technique for hemodynamical assessment. The applied ePIV and CFD techniques enable two- and three-dimensional assessment of local hemodynamics with high spatiotemporal resolution and thereby overcome key limitations of current clinical modalities making them an attractive and cost-effective alternative for hemodynamical assessment in clinical practice.