Vascular dimensions of the cerebral arteries follow the principle of minimum work.
- 1 March 1993
- journal article
- abstracts
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 24 (3) , 371-377
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.24.3.371
Abstract
The principle of minimum work is a parametric optimization model for the growth and adaptation of arterial trees. It establishes a balance between energy dissipation due to frictional resistance of laminar flow (shear stress) and the minimum volume of the vascular system, implying that the radius of the vessel is adjusted to the cube root of the volumetric flow. The purpose of this study is to verify whether the internal carotid artery system obeys the principle of minimum work. Measurements of the radius of parent and branch segments of the internal carotid, anterior, and middle cerebral arteries were performed on analog angiographs chosen at random from a set classified as normal. The branch angles were measured from lateral projections in bifurcations of the anterior cerebral artery. The relation of the calibers of parent and branch vessels was analyzed. The area ratio of the bifurcations (N = 174) was 1.2 +/- 0.4 (mean +/- SD). The equation (r0)n = (r1)n + (r2)n was solved for n, resulting in n = 2.9 +/- 0.7 (mean +/- SD, N = 157). Optimum proportions between the radii of parent (r0) and branch (r1 and r2) vessels in the internal carotid artery system were verified in normal carotid angiographs up to four branch generations, according to the theoretical equation r0(3) = r1(3) + r2(3) (r = 0.989, N = 174). No clear correlation was found between the measured branch angles, the relative branch cross-sectional area, and the theoretical optimum angles. This study demonstrates that the process of branching of the internal carotid artery system obeys the principle of minimum work, as the diameter exponent approximates 3. The principle of minimum work establishes strict functional relations between volumetric flow, flow velocity, and vessel radius. This model was extended to parametric optimization of branch angles, which has proved irrelevant in terms of functional optimization. Our results corroborate this finding. Shear stress-induced endothelial mediation seems to be the regulating mechanism for the maintenance of this optimum vessel design. The magnitude of wall shear stress is the same at every point in a vascular network obeying the principle of minimum work, because the flow rate influences the shear stress proportionally to the third power of the vessel radius. This observation has implications for understanding the remodeling of the cerebral vascular network in the presence of arteriovenous malformations and for the pathogenesis of saccular aneurysms.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Shear Stress Induces Changes in Cerebral Endothelial Cell Morphology and Cytoskeletal AnatomyNeurosurgery, 1992
- An optimal flow-radius equation for microvessel non-newtonian blood flowMicrovascular Research, 1987
- Cost analysis of arterial branching in the cardiovascular systems of man and animalsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1986
- Cost of departure from optimality in arterial branchingJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1984
- Blood Flow Velocity in the Pial Arteries of Cats, with Particular Reference to the Vessel DiameterJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1984
- The obligatory role of endothelial cells in the relaxation of arterial smooth muscle by acetylcholineNature, 1980
- Vascular CaliberCardiology, 1975
- Physical factors in the initiation, growth, and rupture of human intracranial saccular aneurysmsJournal of Neurosurgery, 1972
- A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CIRCUMFERENCE AND WEIGHT IN TREES AND ITS BEARING ON BRANCHING ANGLESThe Journal of general physiology, 1927
- THE PHYSIOLOGICAL PRINCIPLE OF MINIMUM WORK APPLIED TO THE ANGLE OF BRANCHING OF ARTERIESThe Journal of general physiology, 1926