Blood flow is vital to life, yet disturbed flow has been linked to atherosclerosis, thrombosis, and endothelial dysfunction. The commonly used hemodynamic descriptor "disturbed flow" found in disease and medical devices is not clearly defined in many studies. However, the specific flow regime-laminar, transitional, or turbulent-can have very different effects on hemostasis, thrombosis, and vascular health. Therefore, it remains important to clinically identify turbulence in cardiovascular flow and to have available assays that can be used to study effects of turbulence. The objective of the current communication was to 1) provide clarity and guidance for how to clinically identify turbulence, 2) define standard measures of turbulence that can allow the recreation of flow conditions in a benchtop assay, and 3) review how cells and proteins in the blood can be impacted by turbulence based on current literature.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtha.2024.09.026 | DOI Listing |
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