@article {Levitt00, author = {Michael R Levitt and Michael C Barbour and Sabine Rolland du Roscoat and Christian Geindreau and Venkat K Chivukula and Patrick M McGah and John D Nerva and Ryan P Morton and Louis J Kim and Alberto Aliseda}, title = {Computational fluid dynamics of cerebral aneurysm coiling using high-resolution and high-energy synchrotron X-ray microtomography: comparison with the homogeneous porous medium approach}, volume = {9}, number = {8}, pages = {00--00}, year = {2017}, doi = {10.1136/neurintsurg-2016-012479}, publisher = {British Medical Journal Publishing Group}, abstract = {Background Computational modeling of intracranial aneurysms provides insights into the influence of hemodynamics on aneurysm growth, rupture, and treatment outcome. Standard modeling of coiled aneurysms simplifies the complex geometry of the coil mass into a homogeneous porous medium that fills the aneurysmal sac. We compare hemodynamics of coiled aneurysms modeled from high-resolution imaging with those from the same aneurysms modeled following the standard technique, in an effort to characterize sources of error from the simplified model.Materials Physical models of two unruptured aneurysms were created using three-dimensional printing. The models were treated with coil embolization using the same coils as those used in actual patient treatment and then scanned by synchrotron X-ray microtomography to obtain high-resolution imaging of the coil mass. Computational modeling of each aneurysm was performed using patient-specific boundary conditions. The coils were modeled using the simplified porous medium or by incorporating the X-ray imaged coil surface, and the differences in hemodynamic variables were assessed.Results X-ray microtomographic imaging of coils and incorporation into computational models were successful for both aneurysms. Porous medium calculations of coiled aneurysm hemodynamics overestimated intra-aneurysmal flow, underestimated oscillatory shear index and viscous dissipation, and over- or underpredicted wall shear stress (WSS) and WSS gradient compared with X-ray-based coiled computational fluid dynamics models.Conclusions Computational modeling of coiled intracranial aneurysms using the porous medium approach may inaccurately estimate key hemodynamic variables compared with models incorporating high-resolution synchrotron X-ray microtomographic imaging of complex aneurysm coil geometry.}, issn = {1759-8478}, URL = {https://jnis.bmj.com/content/9/8/00.1}, eprint = {https://jnis.bmj.com/content/9/8/00.1.full.pdf}, journal = {Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery} }