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Numerical investigation of lymph flow through pumping lymphatics / LOEIZ MEDINA

Swansea University Author: LOEIZ MEDINA

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    Copyright: The author, Loeiz Zamora Medina, 2023. Released under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial No–Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) License. Third party content is excluded for use under the license terms.

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DOI (Published version): 10.23889/SUthesis.62585

Abstract

This thesis aims at numerically modelling the lymphatic network at different scales. A failure of this network results in an accumulation of fluid in the area concerned, which can lead to lymphoedema.With the objective to understand this network and how it develops its ca-pacity to move lymph, we ar...

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Published: Swansea 2023
Institution: Swansea University
Degree level: Doctoral
Degree name: Ph.D
Supervisor: Van Loon, Raoul ; Podgorski, Thomas ; Ismaïl, Mourad
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa62585
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Abstract: This thesis aims at numerically modelling the lymphatic network at different scales. A failure of this network results in an accumulation of fluid in the area concerned, which can lead to lymphoedema.With the objective to understand this network and how it develops its ca-pacity to move lymph, we are interested in a comparison between different description and models on the lymphatic network from the literature. We first study the discrete approach in zero dimension and in one dimension. In addi-tion, the different constitutive equations observed in the literature are detailed and analysed. In order to understand the interactions between the basic motile elements of the lymphatic network, different methods for coupling calculations in fluid-structure simulation are presented. Then, with the help of different recent articles, we compare different approaches and geometries for the study of a lymphangion.In this zero-dimensional approach, a new numerical formulation is used for the calculation of lymph flow in the collecting network. Equations of this model are detailed in this document, and the number of parameters generally used in the constitutive equation is reduced. Moreover, these equations allow for a variable contraction frequency depending on the load imposed by the boundary condition applied. Different specific cases such as divergent and convergent bifurcations, elementary units of a network are first studied. Furthermore, lymphangions at the end of a channel appear to deliver more pumping energy than the initial ones. The results from the simulations are compared with experimental data. Finally, a specific and realistic network geometry extracted from an anatomical drawing of a leg is used to simulate the model and show complex synchronization behaviours between lymphangions. Three different regimes of synchronization between lymphangion in a channel are identified.For the last chapter, a two-dimensional model of a lymphangion is proposed, which will then be used to study the behaviour of valves, lymphocytes and walls. The operation of the multi-physics fluid-structure code is explained, it is based on a method called: Immersed Structural Potential Method (ISPM). Initially, the equations of fluid and solid mechanics are introduced, how they are coupled, as well as the details of their implementation. Then, we study the behaviour of a group of lymphocytes in the lymphatic channel using a fluid-structure interaction code. Using the geometry of a lymphangion, we compare the displacement of the lymphocytes in different cases, first with or without valve, pulsation of the fluid and then the moving walls. We observe that a poiseuille flow is maintained across the range of lymphocite density considered here. This type of flow is similar to that of red blood cells in a blood stream.
Keywords: Numerical simulation, Lymph, Microfluidic, Lymphoedema
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering