Wednesday, April 24, 2024
News

Study examines effects of exercise, age effects on plaque formation in arteries

   SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Washington | January 30, 2022 5:50:16 PM IST
A new study used fluid dynamics simulations to study the effect of exercise at various ages on plaque formation in the arteries.

The study has been published in the 'Physics of Fluids Journal'.

It has been known for years that exercise and age affect the formation of plaques through a process known as atherosclerosis. What has not been fully understood, however, is how the geometrical features of the arteries affect plaque formation, although a dilated region in the inner carotid branch, the sinus, appears to be a vulnerable site.

"It is commonly accepted that the disturbed flow induces atherosclerosis," said author Xiaolei Yang.

To study this, the authors considered two arterial geometries, one with a bulging outer artery and the other without, and modelled the effect of exercise and age on blood flow through the two model arteries.

Two main arteries carrying blood to the head and neck, known as the carotid arteries, branch off from a single large artery at a position near the thyroid gland. One branch, the internal carotid artery, or ICA, carries blood inside the cranium to the brain, while the external carotid artery remains outside the cranium and brings blood to the neck, face, and scalp.

Just above the bifurcation, the ICA bulges outward, forming a region known as a sinus that is sensitive to blood pressure changes and helps regulate blood flow and heart rate.

"Our work investigated the patterns of disturbed blood flow in two different model carotids, one with high-risk geometrical factors and the other without," co-author Xinyi He said.

She explained high-risk factors include high flare and low proximal curvature in the sinus. Flare is defined as the ratio of the maximum cross-section in the sinus bulb to its minimal value, while proximal curvature measures how much the artery curves above the bifurcation point.

To model exercise, the authors digitized blood flow measurements from individuals in three different age groups: 32-34, 54-55, and 62-63. These digitized flowrates were used as input to their computational model.

"Overall, the effects of exercise are different for different people. Particularly, we show that exercising decreases the reversed flow volume for the 62-63 age group with the low-risk carotid, which is probably related to the decrease of systolic time interval," said Yang.

He said that this suggested that evaluating the effect of exercise on atherosclerosis required consideration of patient-specific geometries and ages.

"For the current findings to become helpful, the analysis should be coupled to physiological and chemical processes occurring at the cellular level," Yang said, indicating this would be the subject of the group's future work. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE SCIENCE NEWS
Study reveals novel therapeutic target f...
Study finds how liver inflammation assoc...
Study finds common complication of atria...
Researchers discover how complexities in...
Study finds how adding chemotherapy to h...
Study finds biodiversity is key to bette...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
J-K: High alert in Rajouri, security for...
'If people raise political issue, I do n...
Madhya Pradesh: Police recover cash wort...
Lok Sabha elections: Security beefed up ...
Closed tea gardens, minimum wages key el...
Siddaramaiah expresses gratitude to SC a...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
Eminent economist Sanjeev Sanyal to... 
Repsol Honda Team look for progress... 
Southern China battered with massiv... 
President Droupadi Murmu offers pra... 
LS polls: MCD offers eye-popping di... 
Theegala comes second, but feels wi... 
UAE, Oman issue joint statement rea... 
IPL 2024: Gaikwad's explosive ton, ...