Premature birth is one of the most important factors increasing the risk
for brain damage in newborns. Development of an intraventricular
hemorrhage in the immature brain is often triggered by fluctuations of
cerebral blood flow (CBF). Therefore, monitoring of CBF becomes an
important task in clinical care of preterm infants. Mathematical
modeling of CBF can be a complementary tool in addition to diagnostic
tools in clinical practice and research. The purpose of the present
study is an enhancement of the previously developed mathematical model
for CBF by a detailed description of apparent blood viscosity and vessel
resistance, accounting for inhomogeneous hematocrit distribution in
multiscale blood vessel architectures. The enhanced model is applied to
our medical database retrospectively collected from the 254 preterm
infants with a gestational age of 23-30 weeks. It is shown that by
including clinically measured hematocrit in the mathematical model,
apparent blood viscosity, vessel resistance, and hence the CBF are
strongly affected. Thus, a statistically significant decrease in
hematocrit values observed in the group of preterm infants with
intraventricular hemorrhage resulted in a statistically significant
increase in calculated CBF values.
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Premature birth is one of the most important factors increasing the risk
for brain damage in newborns. Development of an intraventricular
hemorrhage in the immature brain is often triggered by fluctuations of
cerebral blood flow (CBF). Therefore, monitoring of CBF becomes an
important task in clinical care of preterm infants. Mathematical
modeling of CBF can be a complementary tool in addition to diagnostic
tools in clinical practice and research. The purpose of the present
study is an enhanceme...
»