Pulsatile Driving Stabilizes Loops in Elastic Flow Networks

ORAL

Abstract

Existing models of adaptation in biological flow networks consider their constituent vessels (e.g. veins and arteries) to be rigid, thus predicting a non physiological response when the drive (e.g the heart) is dynamic. Here we show that incorporating pulsatile driving and properties such as fluid inertia and vessel compliance into a general adaptation framework fundamentally changes the expected structure at steady state of a minimal one-loop network. In particular, pulsatility is observed to give rise to resonances which can stabilize loops for a much broader class of metabolic cost functions than predicted by existing theories. Our work points to the need for a more realistic treatment of adaptation in biological flow networks, especially those driven by a pulsatile source, and provides insights into pathologies that emerge when such pulsatility is disrupted in human beings.

*The authors acknowledge support from the NSF Award PHY-1554887, the Simons Foundation through Award 568888 and the University of Pennsylvania Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) through Award DMR-1720530.

Presenters

  • Purba Chatterjee

    • University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Purba Chatterjee

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Sean Fancher

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Eleni Katifori

    • University of Pennsylvania