International audienceLittle is known about transport throughout the respiration cycle in the conducting airways. It is challenging to appropriately describe the time-dependent number of particles entering back into the model during exhalation. Modeling the entire lung is not feasible; therefore multi-domain methods must be employed. Here, we present a new framework that is designed to simulate particles throughout the respiration cycle, incorporating realistic airway geometry and respiration. This framework is applied for a healthy rat lung exposed to 1 micron diameter particles to facilitate parameterization and validation. The flow field is calculated in the conducting airways (3D domain) by solving the incompressible Navier-Stokes ...
The alveolar region, encompassing millions of alveoli, is the most vital part of the lung. However, ...
International audienceThere has been relatively little attention given on predicting particle deposi...
Background: While it is generally accepted that inertial impaction will lead to particle loss as aer...
International audienceAerosolized particles are commonly used for therapeutic drug delivery as they ...
International audienceIn this paper, we present a framework that couples three-dimensional (3D) to o...
International audienceImage-based in-silico modeling tools provide detailed velocity and particle de...
Rats have been widely used as surrogates for evaluating the adverse health effects of inhaled airbor...
International audienceIn silico models of airflow and particle deposition in the lungs are increasin...
Understanding the fate of inhaled aerosol particles in healthy and diseased lungs may help in assess...
Rats are used to test the toxicological and pharmacological effects of aerosol particles on the orga...
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd The major problem in understanding the therapeutically targeted drug delivery sy...
Knowledge of particle deposition is important in clinical settings or when discussing environmental ...
One-dimensional transport models (trumpet model and multi-branch-point model) derived from those dev...
A one-dimensional model of respiratory deposition is developed based on an Eulerian approach. The mo...
Targeted drug delivery is an advanced method discussed in the literature for optimized treatment of ...
The alveolar region, encompassing millions of alveoli, is the most vital part of the lung. However, ...
International audienceThere has been relatively little attention given on predicting particle deposi...
Background: While it is generally accepted that inertial impaction will lead to particle loss as aer...
International audienceAerosolized particles are commonly used for therapeutic drug delivery as they ...
International audienceIn this paper, we present a framework that couples three-dimensional (3D) to o...
International audienceImage-based in-silico modeling tools provide detailed velocity and particle de...
Rats have been widely used as surrogates for evaluating the adverse health effects of inhaled airbor...
International audienceIn silico models of airflow and particle deposition in the lungs are increasin...
Understanding the fate of inhaled aerosol particles in healthy and diseased lungs may help in assess...
Rats are used to test the toxicological and pharmacological effects of aerosol particles on the orga...
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd The major problem in understanding the therapeutically targeted drug delivery sy...
Knowledge of particle deposition is important in clinical settings or when discussing environmental ...
One-dimensional transport models (trumpet model and multi-branch-point model) derived from those dev...
A one-dimensional model of respiratory deposition is developed based on an Eulerian approach. The mo...
Targeted drug delivery is an advanced method discussed in the literature for optimized treatment of ...
The alveolar region, encompassing millions of alveoli, is the most vital part of the lung. However, ...
International audienceThere has been relatively little attention given on predicting particle deposi...
Background: While it is generally accepted that inertial impaction will lead to particle loss as aer...