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Model de Windkessel×Hemodinàmica per CFD×Fotopletismografia×
CampBiomecànicaBiomecànicaBiomecànica
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Any d'origen196920021937
Autor originalNikolaos WesterhofDavid SteinmanHertzman
TipusPhysiological lumped-parameter modelingMulti-physics finite element simulationOptical signal acquisition and analysis pipeline
Font seminalWesterhof, N., Bosman, F., De Vries, N. C., & Noordergraaf, A. (1969). Analog studies of the human systemic arterial tree. Journal of Biomechanics, 2(2), 121-143. DOI ↗Steinman, D. A., Vinh, B., Ethier, C. R., Ojha, M., Cobbold, R. S., & Johnston, K. W. (2002). A numerical simulation of flow in a two-dimensional end-to-side anastomosis model. Journal of Biomechanical Engineering, 115(1), 112-118. link ↗Allen, J. (2007). Photoplethysmography and its application in clinical physiology. Physiology & Behavior, 107(4), 540-548. link ↗
ÀliesElastic chamber model, Arterial compliance model, Lumped parameter modelCardiovascular CFD, Blood flow simulation, Hemodynamic simulationPPG, Pulse oximetry, Reflectance photometry
Relacionats333
ResumThe Windkessel model is a lumped-parameter representation of the arterial system that captures the pulsatile dynamics of blood flow and pressure using simple mechanical analogs (resistors and capacitors). Named after the German word for air chamber, it was formalized by Westerhof and colleagues in the late 1960s and remains fundamental to understanding arterial hemodynamics and blood pressure regulation.Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) for hemodynamics solves the Navier-Stokes equations to simulate blood flow in realistic vascular geometries. Pioneered by researchers such as David Steinman, CFD hemodynamics reveals complex flow patterns, wall shear stress distributions, and hemodynamic factors implicated in atherosclerosis, aneurysm rupture, and device-induced thrombosis.Photoplethysmography (PPG) measures blood volume changes in tissue using light absorption, providing a non-invasive optical window into cardiovascular dynamics. Originally developed by Hertzman in 1937, PPG is now ubiquitous in pulse oximetry, smartwatches, and research applications for monitoring heart rate, blood oxygenation, and vascular function.
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: Windkessel Model · CFD Hemodynamics · Photoplethysmography. Recuperat el 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare