CFD CHARACTERIZATION OF FLOW PATTERN AROUND ENDOTHELIAL CELL IN DENGUE INFECTION WITH PLASMA LEAKAGE

Authors

  • Nur Kaliwantoro Biomedical Engineering, Graduate School, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  • Marsetyawan HNE Soesatyo Histology and Cells Biology Department, Faculty of Medical, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  • Indarto Indarto Mechanical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  • Mohammad Juffrie Pediatric Department, Faculty of Medical, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  • Rini Dharmastiti Industrial Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  • Mohammad Tauviqirrahman Mechanical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Diponegoro University, Semarang, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11113/jt.v76.5709

Abstract

Plasma leakage is the pathological hall mark in dengue infection and may cause fatal condition to the patients. In this paper, the CFD (computational fluid dynamic) model is adopted to characterize the flow on the endothelial cells surface with plasma leakage based on in vitro experiments of HUVEC (human umbilical vein endothelial cell) culture on the permeable membrane. The computational domain used is a simplified model of single cell. At the leading edge of the domain and among the membranes, the gaps are modeled as a representation of cell-cell junction breakdown caused by dengue virus infection.  The result shows that at the leading edge , the fluid starts to move more quickly and increases to the maximum value at the middle of the cell and then drops to zero at the trailing edge. From the physical point of view, this result describes that there is a variation of the values of the wall shear stress due to the velocity gradient. These results can be considered as a first step to develop the ways of the prevention of the dengue infection through manipulation the shear stress to reduce the potency of dengue virus to attach the cell surface.  

References

WHO. 2009. Dengue, Guidelines For Diagnosis, Treatment, Prevention And Control. France: WHO.

Cardier, J. E., Rivas, B., Romano, E., Raithman, A. L., Perez-Perez, C., Ochoa, Caceres, A.M., Cardier, M., Guevara, N. and Giovanetti, R. 2006. Evidence of vascular damage in dengue disease: Demonstration of high level of soluble cell adhesion molecule and circulating endothelial cells. Endothelium. 13: 335-340.

Papaioannou, T. G. and Stefanadis, C. 2005. Vascular wall shear stress: basic principles and methods. Hellenic Journal of Cardiology. 46: 9-15.

Demosthenes. 2007. Wall shear stress: theoritical measurement. Elsevier, CA.

Ngai, C.Y. and Yao, X. 2001. Vascular response to shear stress: the involvement of mechanosensors in endothelial cells. The Open Circulation and Vascular Journal. 3: 85-94.

Mitchell, J. M. and King, M. R. 2013. Fluid shear stress sensitizes cancer cells to reseptor-media apoptosis via trimetric death receptor. New Journal of Physics. Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft, 15.

Chiu, J. J., Chen, L. J., Lee, P. L., Lee, C. I, Lo, L. W., Usami, S. and Chien, S. 2003. Shear stress inhibits adhesion molecule expression in vascular endothelial cells induced by coculture with smooth muscle cells. Blood . 101: 2667-2674

Downloads

Published

2015-10-01

Issue

Section

Science and Engineering

How to Cite

CFD CHARACTERIZATION OF FLOW PATTERN AROUND ENDOTHELIAL CELL IN DENGUE INFECTION WITH PLASMA LEAKAGE. (2015). Jurnal Teknologi (Sciences & Engineering), 76(7). https://doi.org/10.11113/jt.v76.5709