Towards the modeling of mucus draining from human lung: role of airways deformation on air-mucus interaction
Benjamin Mauroy, Patrice Flaud, Dominique Pelca, Christian Fausser,, Jacques Merckx, Barrett R. Mitchell

TL;DR
This study develops a quasi-static numerical model to understand how chest physiotherapy affects mucus mobilization in the lungs, highlighting the importance of airflow and pressure application for effective secretion clearance.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel biophysical model of lung mechanics that simulates the effects of chest physiotherapy on mucus movement and airway resistance.
Findings
Higher pressure and rapid application increase secretion mobilization.
Excessive pressure can cause airway compression, reducing airflow.
The model predicts that physiotherapy mainly reduces airway resistance, improving ventilation.
Abstract
Chest physiotherapy is an empirical technique used to help secretions to get out of the lung whenever stagnation occurs. Although commonly used, little is known about the inner mechanisms of chest physiotherapy and controversies about its use are coming out regularly. Thus, a scientific validation of chest physiotherapy is needed to evaluate its effects on secretions. We setup a quasi-static numerical model of chest physiotherapy based on thorax and lung physiology and on their respective biophysics. We modeled the lung with an idealized deformable symmetric bifurcating tree. Bronchi and their inner fluids mechanics are assumed axisymmetric. Static data from the literature is used to build a model for the lung's mechanics. Secretions motion is the consequence of the shear constraints apply by the air flow. The input of the model is the pressure on the chest wall at each time, and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInhalation and Respiratory Drug Delivery
