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Flow-induced segregation and dynamics of red blood cells in sickle cell disease

Published 20 Dec 2019 in physics.bio-ph and cond-mat.soft | (1912.10101v2)

Abstract: Blood flow in sickle cell disease (SCD) can substantially differ from normal blood flow due to significant alterations in the physical properties of the red blood cells (RBCs). Chronic complications, such as inflammation of the endothelial cells lining blood vessel walls, are associated with SCD, for reasons that are unclear. Here, detailed boundary integral simulations are performed to investigate an idealized model flow flow in SCD, a binary suspension of flexible biconcave discoidal fluid-filled capsules and stiff curved prolate capsules that represent healthy and sickle RBCs, respectively, subjected to pressure-driven flow in a planar slit. The key observation is that, unlike healthy RBCs that concentrate around the center of the channel and form an RBC-depleted layer (i.e. cell-free layer) next to the walls, sickle cells are largely drained from the bulk of the suspension and aggregate inside the cell-free layer, displaying strong margination. These cells are found to undergo a rigid-body-like rolling orbit near the walls. Furthermore, the additional shear stress on the walls induced by the presence of marginated cells is computed. Compared to the small fluctuations in wall shear stress for a suspension of healthy RBCs, large local peaks in wall shear stress are observed for the binary suspensions, due to the proximity of the marginated stiff cells to the walls. As endothelial cells are known to mechanotransduce physical forces such as aberrations in shear stress and convert them to physiological processes such as activation of inflammatory signals, these results may aid in understanding mechanisms for endothelial dysfunction associated with SCD.

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