A viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flow

A new mathematical model of the transport of mucus and periciliary liquid (PCL) in the airways by cilia is presented. Mucus is represented by a linearly viscoelastic fluid, the mat of cilia is modelled as an ‘active porous medium.’ The propulsive effect of the cilia is modelled by a time-dependent f...

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Những tác giả chính: Smith, D, Gaffney, E, Blake, J, Lubkin, D
Định dạng: Journal article
Được phát hành: Springer 2007
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author Smith, D
Gaffney, E
Blake, J
Lubkin, D
author_facet Smith, D
Gaffney, E
Blake, J
Lubkin, D
author_sort Smith, D
collection OXFORD
description A new mathematical model of the transport of mucus and periciliary liquid (PCL) in the airways by cilia is presented. Mucus is represented by a linearly viscoelastic fluid, the mat of cilia is modelled as an ‘active porous medium.’ The propulsive effect of the cilia is modelled by a time-dependent force acting in a shear-thinned ‘traction layer’ between the mucus and the PCL. The effects of surface and interface tension are modelled by constraining the mucus free surface and mucus–PCL interface to be flat. It is assumed that the epithelium is impermeable to fluid. Using Fourier series, the system is converted into ODEs and solved numerically. We calculate values for mean mucus speed close to those observed by Matsui et~al. [{J. Clin. Invest.}, 102(6):1125’1131, 1998], (~40 μms−1). We obtain more detail regarding the dynamics of the flow and the nonlinear relationships between physical parameters in healthy and diseased states than in previously published models. Pressure gradients in the PCL caused by interface and surface tension are vital to ensuring efficient transport of mucus, and the role of the mucus–PCL interface appears to be to support such pressure gradients, ensuring efficient transport. Mean transport of PCL is found to be very small, consistent with previous analyses, providing insight into theories regarding the normal tonicity of PCL.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e8f7f488-dd91-48dd-a9be-7b7fc8fd41b12022-03-27T10:50:42ZA viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flowJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e8f7f488-dd91-48dd-a9be-7b7fc8fd41b1Mathematical Institute - ePrintsSpringer2007Smith, DGaffney, EBlake, JLubkin, DA new mathematical model of the transport of mucus and periciliary liquid (PCL) in the airways by cilia is presented. Mucus is represented by a linearly viscoelastic fluid, the mat of cilia is modelled as an ‘active porous medium.’ The propulsive effect of the cilia is modelled by a time-dependent force acting in a shear-thinned ‘traction layer’ between the mucus and the PCL. The effects of surface and interface tension are modelled by constraining the mucus free surface and mucus–PCL interface to be flat. It is assumed that the epithelium is impermeable to fluid. Using Fourier series, the system is converted into ODEs and solved numerically. We calculate values for mean mucus speed close to those observed by Matsui et~al. [{J. Clin. Invest.}, 102(6):1125’1131, 1998], (~40 μms−1). We obtain more detail regarding the dynamics of the flow and the nonlinear relationships between physical parameters in healthy and diseased states than in previously published models. Pressure gradients in the PCL caused by interface and surface tension are vital to ensuring efficient transport of mucus, and the role of the mucus–PCL interface appears to be to support such pressure gradients, ensuring efficient transport. Mean transport of PCL is found to be very small, consistent with previous analyses, providing insight into theories regarding the normal tonicity of PCL.
spellingShingle Smith, D
Gaffney, E
Blake, J
Lubkin, D
A viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flow
title A viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flow
title_full A viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flow
title_fullStr A viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flow
title_full_unstemmed A viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flow
title_short A viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flow
title_sort viscoelastic traction layer model of mucociliary flow
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