Shear induced diffusion of platelets revisited

Front Physiol. 2022 Oct 13:13:985905. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2022.985905. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

The transport of platelets in blood is commonly assumed to obey an advection-diffusion equation with a diffusion constant given by the so-called Zydney-Colton theory. Here we reconsider this hypothesis based on experimental observations and numerical simulations including a fully resolved suspension of red blood cells and platelets subject to a shear. We observe that the transport of platelets perpendicular to the flow can be characterized by a non-trivial distribution of velocities with and exponential decreasing bulk, followed by a power law tail. We conclude that such distribution of velocities leads to diffusion of platelets about two orders of magnitude higher than predicted by Zydney-Colton theory. We tested this distribution with a minimal stochastic model of platelets deposition to cover space and time scales similar to our experimental results, and confirm that the exponential-powerlaw distribution of velocities results in a coefficient of diffusion significantly larger than predicted by the Zydney-Colton theory.

Keywords: high performance computing; high-fidelity blood simulation; lattice Boltzmann method; platelets diffusion coefficient; platelets transport; shear induced diffusion.

Grants and funding

This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 823712 (CompBioMed2 project). Furthermore, this work was supported by grants from the CHU Charleroi (Fonds pour la Chirurgie Cardiaque; Fonds de la Recherche Medicale en Hainaut) and by the Swiss PASC project “Virtual Physiological Blood: an HPC framework for blood flow simulations in vasculature and in medical devices”. Open access funding was provided by the University of Geneva.