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Published July 2013 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Shock-induced collapse of a bubble inside a deformable vessel

Abstract

Shockwave lithotripsy repeatedly focuses shockwaves on kidney stones to induce their fracture, partially through cavitation erosion. A typical side effect of the procedure is hemorrhage, which is potentially the result of the growth and collapse of bubbles inside blood vessels. To identify the mechanisms by which shock-induced collapse could lead to the onset of injury, we study an idealized problem involving a preexisting bubble in a deformable vessel. We utilize a high-order accurate, shock- and interfacecapturing, finite-volume scheme and simulate the three-dimensional shock-induced collapse of an air bubble immersed in a cylindrical water column which is embedded in a gelatin/water mixture. The mixture is a soft tissue simulant, 10% gelatin by weight, and is modeled by the stiffened gas equation of state. The bubble dynamics of this model configuration are characterized by the collapse of the bubble and its subsequent jetting in the direction of the propagation of the shockwave. The vessel wall, which is defined by the material interface between the water and gelatin/water mixture, is invaginated by the collapse and distended by the impact of the jet. The present results show that the highest measured pressures and deformations occur when the volumetric confinement of the bubble is strongest, the bubble is nearest the vessel wall and/or the angle of incidence of the shockwave reduces the distance between the jet tip and the nearest vessel surface. For a particular case considered, the 40 MPa shockwave utilized in this study to collapse the bubble generated a vessel wall pressure of almost 450 MPa and produced both an invagination and distention of nearly 50% of the initial vessel radius on a O(10) ns timescale. These results are indicative of the significant potential of shock-induced collapse to contribute to the injury of blood vessels in shockwave lithotripsy.

Additional Information

© 2013 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved. Available online 17 January 2013. We are thankful for the valuable conversations with the other members of the Program Project Grant group, which is supported by the National Institutes of Health under grant PO1-DK043881. In particular, discussions with Drs Michael Bailey, Jonathan Freund, Wayne Kreider, Thomas Matula and Oleg Sapozhnikov were extremely helpful. In addition, we would also like to thank Drs Luigi Perotti and Ivan Vlahinic for their invaluable guidance in the application of finite strain theory to this problem. The computations presented here utilized the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment, which is supported by the National Science Foundation grant number OCI-1053575.

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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October 23, 2023