Investigating the Role of Thrombosis, Fenestration, and False Lumen Orbital Orientation in the Hemodynamics of Type B Aortic Dissection

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Abstract

Abstract While much about the fundamental mechanisms behind the initiation and progression of Type B aortic dissection (TBAD) is still unknown, predictive models based on patient-specific computational fluid dynamics (CFD) can help in risk stratification and optimal clinical decision-making. Aiming at the development of personalized treatment, CFD simulations can be leveraged to investigate the interplay between complex aortic flow patterns and anatomical features. In this study, the hemodynamics of false lumen thrombosis, a large fenestration, and the orbital orientation of the false lumen is studied through image-based CFD simulations on three TBAD patient-specific geometries. A new pipeline was developed leveraging the open-source software SimVascular and Paraview to analyze multiple patients simultaneously and to achieve large-scale parallelization in CFD results based on patients’ computed tomography (CT) images. The results of this study suggest that the internal orbital orientation of the false lumen contributes to maintaining a positive luminal pressure difference ∆P T L−FL = P T L − P FL between the true lumen (TL) and the false lumen (FL), despite an impingement area in the false lumen near the entry tear. A positive and high luminal pressure difference is thought to promote TL expansion and FL compression. Moreover, it was also found that both FL thrombosis at the entry tear region, and the presence of a large fenestration in the descending thoracic aorta reduce the magnitude of the negative luminal pressure difference, which in turn may reduce FL expansion and the risk of unstable aortic growth.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00
unpaywall
last seen: 2026-05-20T11:00:21.680559+00:00
License: CC-BY-4.0