Author/Authors :
Nita, Cosmin-Ioan Transilvania University of Brasov - Brasov, Romania , Suzuki, Takashi Department of Innovation for Medical Information Technology - Research Center for Medical Science - Jikei University School of Medicine - Tokyo, Japan , Mihai Itu, Lucian Transilvania University of Brasov - Brasov, Romania , Mihalef, Viorel Siemens Medical Solutions USA - Princeton, USA , Takao, Hiroyuki Department of Innovation for Medical Information Technology - Research Center for Medical Science - Jikei University School of Medicine - Tokyo, Japan , Murayama, Yuichi Department of Neurosurgery - Jikei University School of Medicine - Tokyo, Japan , Sharma, Puneet Siemens Medical Solutions USA - Princeton, USA , Redel, Thomas Advanced Therapies - Forchheim, Germany , Rapaka, Saikiran Siemens Medical Solutions USA - Princeton, USA
Abstract :
In recent years, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has become a valuable tool for investigating hemodynamics in cerebral
aneurysms. CFD provides flow-related quantities, which have been shown to have a potential impact on aneurysm growth and
risk of rupture. However, the adoption of CFD tools in clinical settings is currently limited by the high computational cost and
the engineering expertise required for employing these tools, e.g., for mesh generation, appropriate choice of spatial and
temporal resolution, and of boundary conditions. Herein, we address these challenges by introducing a practical and robust
methodology, focusing on computational performance and minimizing user interaction through automated parameter selection.
We propose a fully automated pipeline that covers the steps from a patient-specific anatomical model to results, based on a fast,
graphics processing unit- (GPU-) accelerated CFD solver and a parameter selection methodology. We use a reduced order
model to compute the initial estimates of the spatial and temporal resolutions and an iterative approach that further adjusts the
resolution during the simulation without user interaction. The pipeline and the solver are validated based on previously
published results, and by comparing the results obtained for 20 cerebral aneurysm cases with those generated by a state-of-theart commercial solver (Ansys CFX, Canonsburg PA). The automatically selected spatial and temporal resolutions lead to results
which closely agree with the state-of-the-art, with an average relative difference of only 2%. Due to the GPU-based
parallelization, simulations are computationally efficient, with a median computation time of 40 minutes per simulation.