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arxiv: 1408.5504 · v2 · pith:PIUHXWKCnew · submitted 2014-08-23 · ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn · physics.bio-ph

Threshold of microvascular occlusion: injury size defines the thrombosis scenario

classification ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn physics.bio-ph
keywords bloodinjurythrombosisthrombusvesselcriticalformationocclusion
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Damage to the blood vessel triggers formation of a hemostatic plug, which is meant to prevent bleeding, yet the same phenomenon may result in a total blockade of a blood vessel by a thrombus, causing severe medical conditions. Here, we show that the physical interplay between platelet adhesion and hemodynamics in a microchannel manifests in a critical threshold behavior of a growing thrombus. Depending on the size of injury, two distinct dynamic pathways of thrombosis were found: the formation of a nonocclusive plug, if injury length does not exceed the critical value, and the total occlusion of the vessel by the thrombus otherwise. We develop a mathematical model that demonstrates that switching between these regimes occurs as a result of a saddle-node bifurcation. Our study reveals the mechanism of self-regulation of thrombosis in blood microvessels and explains experimentally observed distinctions between thrombi of different physical etiology. This also can be useful for the design of platelet-aggregation-inspired engineering solutions.

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