Bertram C D, Macaskill C, Moore J E
School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia.
J Biomech Eng. 2011 Jan;133(1):011008. doi: 10.1115/1.4002799.
The aim of this investigation was to achieve the first step toward a comprehensive model of the lymphatic system. A numerical model has been constructed of a lymphatic vessel, consisting of a short series chain of contractile segments (lymphangions) and of intersegmental valves. The changing diameter of a segment governs the difference between the flows through inlet and outlet valves and is itself governed by a balance between transmural pressure and passive and active wall properties. The compliance of segments is maximal at intermediate diameters and decreases when the segments are subject to greatly positive or negative transmural pressure. Fluid flow is the result of time-varying active contraction causing diameter to reduce and is limited by segmental viscous and valvular resistance. The valves effect a smooth transition from low forward-flow resistance to high backflow resistance. Contraction occurs sequentially in successive lymphangions in the forward-flow direction. The behavior of chains of one to five lymphangions was investigated by means of pump function curves, with variation of valve opening parameters, maximum contractility, lymphangion size gradation, number of lymphangions, and phase delay between adjacent lymphangion contractions. The model was reasonably robust numerically, with mean flow-rate generally reducing as adverse pressure was increased. Sequential contraction was found to be much more efficient than synchronized contraction. At the highest adverse pressures, pumping failed by one of two mechanisms, depending on parameter settings: either mean leakback flow exceeded forward pumping or contraction failed to open the lymphangion outlet valve. Maximum pressure and maximum flow-rate were both sensitive to the contractile state; maximum pressure was also determined by the number of lymphangions in series. Maximum flow-rate was highly sensitive to the transmural pressure experienced by the most upstream lymphangions, suggesting that many feeding lymphatics would be needed to supply one downstream lymphangion chain pumping at optimal transmural pressure.
本研究的目的是朝着建立一个全面的淋巴系统模型迈出第一步。已经构建了一个淋巴管的数值模型,该模型由一系列短的收缩段(淋巴管节)和节间瓣膜组成。一个节段直径的变化决定了通过入口和出口瓣膜的流量差异,而其本身又受跨壁压力与被动和主动壁特性之间的平衡所支配。节段的顺应性在中间直径时最大,当节段受到极大的正或负跨壁压力时则降低。流体流动是随时间变化的主动收缩导致直径减小的结果,并受到节段粘性和瓣膜阻力的限制。瓣膜实现了从低正向流动阻力到高反向流动阻力的平滑过渡。收缩在向前流动方向上的连续淋巴管节中依次发生。通过泵功能曲线研究了一至五个淋巴管节链的行为,改变了瓣膜开放参数、最大收缩性、淋巴管节大小分级、淋巴管节数量以及相邻淋巴管节收缩之间的相位延迟。该模型在数值上相当稳健,随着不利压力的增加,平均流速通常会降低。发现顺序收缩比同步收缩效率高得多。在最高不利压力下,根据参数设置,泵送失败有两种机制之一:要么平均逆流超过正向泵送,要么收缩未能打开淋巴管节出口瓣膜。最大压力和最大流速都对收缩状态敏感;最大压力还由串联的淋巴管节数量决定。最大流速对最上游淋巴管节所经历的跨壁压力高度敏感,这表明需要许多输入淋巴管来为一个以最佳跨壁压力泵送的下游淋巴管节链提供供应。