On the dispersion of a drug delivered intrathecally in the spinal canal
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Lawrence, J.J.; Coenen, Wilfried; Sánchez, Antonio Luis; Pawlak, Geno; Martínez Bazán, Jesús Carlos; Haughton, Victor; Lasheras, Juan CarlosEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Materia
biological fluid dynamics biomedical flows
Fecha
2019-02-19Referencia bibliográfica
Journal of Fluid Mechanics
Patrocinador
Spanish MINECO (Secretaría de Estado de Investigación, Desarrollo e Innovación) through grants DPI2014-59292-C3-3 and DPI2017-88201-C3-2-R, co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).Resumen
This paper investigates the transport of a solute carried by the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in the spinal canal. The analysis is motivated by the need for a better understanding of drug dispersion in connection with intrathecal drug delivery (ITDD), a medical procedure used for treatment of some cancers, infections, and pain, involving the delivery of the drug to the central nervous system by direct injection into the CSF via the lumbar route. The description accounts for the CSF motion in the spinal canal, described in our recent publication \citep{paper1}. The Eulerian velocity field includes an oscillatory component with angular frequency $\omega$, equal to that of the cardiac cycle, and associated tidal volumes that are a factor $\varepsilon \ll 1$ smaller than the total CSF volume in the spinal canal, with the small velocity corrections resulting from convective acceleration providing a steady-streaming component with characteristic residence times of order $\varepsilon^{-2} \omega^{-1} \gg \omega^{-1}$. An asymptotic analysis for $\varepsilon \ll 1$ accounting for the two time scales $\omega^{-1}$ and $\varepsilon^{-2} \omega^{-1}$ is used to investigate the prevailing drug-dispersion mechanisms and their dependence on the solute diffusivity, measured by the Schmidt number $S$. Convective transport driven by the time-averaged Lagrangian velocity, obtained as the sum of the Eulerian steady-streaming velocity and the Stokes-drift velocity associated with the nonuniform pulsating flow, is found to be important for all values of $S$. By way of contrast, shear-enhanced Taylor dispersion, which is important for values of $S$ of order unity, is shown to be negligibly small for the large values $S \sim \varepsilon^{-2} \gg 1$ corresponding to the molecular diffusivities of all ITDD drugs. Results for a model geometry indicate that a simplified equation derived in the intermediate limit $1 \ll S \ll \varepsilon^{-2}$ provides sufficient accuracy under most conditions, and therefore could constitute an attractive reduced model for future quantitative analyses of drug dispersion in the spinal canal. The results can be used to quantify dependences of the drug dispersion rate on the frequency and amplitude of the pulsation of the intracranial pressure, the compliance and specific geometry of the spinal canal, and the molecular diffusivity of the drug.