Image-Based Modeling of Blood Flow and Oxygen Transfer in Feto-Placental Capillaries
Philip Pearce, Paul Brownbill, Jiri Janacek, Marie Jirkovska, Lucie, Kubinova, Igor L. Chernyavsky, Oliver E. Jensen

TL;DR
This study models blood flow and oxygen transfer in placental capillaries using 3D reconstructions, revealing how capillary structure influences oxygen delivery and potential fetal hypoxia.
Contribution
It introduces a novel finite-element modeling approach based on microscopy data and develops regression equations to estimate oxygen transfer considering structural variability.
Findings
Oxygen transfer correlates with pressure drop across capillaries.
Localized dilations can optimize oxygen transfer.
Model explains fetal hypoxia in placental pathologies.
Abstract
During pregnancy, oxygen diffuses from maternal to fetal blood through villous trees in the placenta. In this paper, we simulate blood flow and oxygen transfer in feto-placental capillaries by converting three-dimensional representations of villous and capillary surfaces, reconstructed from confocal laser scanning microscopy, to finite-element meshes, and calculating values of vascular flow resistance and total oxygen transfer. The relationship between the total oxygen transfer rate and the pressure drop through the capillary is shown to be captured across a wide range of pressure drops by physical scaling laws and an upper bound on the oxygen transfer rate. A regression equation is introduced that can be used to estimate the oxygen transfer in a capillary using the vascular resistance. Two techniques for quantifying the effects of statistical variability, experimental uncertainty and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal Respiratory Health Research · Congenital Heart Disease Studies · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies
