CELGNAAug 28, 2025

Data-Driven Bifurcation Handling in Physics-Based Reduced-Order Vascular Hemodynamic Models

arXiv:2508.21165v11 citationsh-index: 7Comput. Methods Programs Biomed.
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses the need for computationally efficient and accurate hemodynamic modeling in cardiovascular medicine, enabling real-time clinical decision support, though it is incremental as it enhances existing ROMs with machine learning components.

The paper tackled the problem of reduced-order models (ROMs) for cardiovascular flows being inaccurate at vessel bifurcations by integrating machine learning-predicted coefficients into zero-dimensional hemodynamic ROMs, resulting in substantial accuracy improvements such as reducing inlet pressure errors from 54 mmHg (45%) to 25 mmHg (17%) on average.

Three-dimensional (3D) finite-element simulations of cardiovascular flows provide high-fidelity predictions to support cardiovascular medicine, but their high computational cost limits clinical practicality. Reduced-order models (ROMs) offer computationally efficient alternatives but suffer reduced accuracy, particularly at vessel bifurcations where complex flow physics are inadequately captured by standard Poiseuille flow assumptions. We present an enhanced numerical framework that integrates machine learning-predicted bifurcation coefficients into zero-dimensional (0D) hemodynamic ROMs to improve accuracy while maintaining computational efficiency. We develop a resistor-resistor-inductor (RRI) model that uses neural networks to predict pressure-flow relationships from bifurcation geometry, incorporating linear and quadratic resistances along with inductive effects. The method employs non-dimensionalization to reduce training data requirements and apriori flow split prediction for improved bifurcation characterization. We incorporate the RRI model into a 0D model using an optimization-based solution strategy. We validate the approach in isolated bifurcations and vascular trees, across Reynolds numbers from 0 to 5,500, defining ROM accuracy by comparison to 3D finite element simulation. Results demonstrate substantial accuracy improvements: averaged across all trees and Reynolds numbers, the RRI method reduces inlet pressure errors from 54 mmHg (45%) for standard 0D models to 25 mmHg (17%), while a simplified resistor-inductor (RI) variant achieves 31 mmHg (26%) error. The enhanced 0D models show particular effectiveness at high Reynolds numbers and in extensive vascular networks. This hybrid numerical approach enables accurate, real-time hemodynamic modeling for clinical decision support, uncertainty quantification, and digital twins in cardiovascular biomedical engineering.

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