Numerical Modeling of COVID-19 Neurological Effects

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A01=William Schiesser
Author_William Schiesser
BBB Permeability
Brain Fog
Brain Hypoxia
Brain Tissue
Capillary Blood
Capillary Blood Flow
capillary dynamics simulation
Category=PSAN
computational neuroscience
Constants R1
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
FD Approximation
Graphical Output
Half Sine Wave
hypoxic brain injury
Incremental Volume
Initial Impairment
Main Program
Mass Transfer Coefficient
method of lines
Ode Integration
Ordinary Differential Equation
Outer Radial Boundaries
oxygen transport modeling
partial differential equation analysis
PDE Model
PDE Solution
RHS Term
scientific computing R
Spatial Grid Points
U1 Par
U1t Par
Vectors U1
Zl U1

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032152110
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Covid-19 is primarily a respiratory disease which results in impaired oxygenation of blood. The O2-deficient blood then moves through the body, and for the study in this book, the focus is on the blood flowing to the brain. The dynamics of blood flow along the brain capillaries and tissue is modeled as systems of ordinary and partial differential equations (ODE/PDEs).

The ODE/PDE methodology is presented through a series of examples,

1. A basic one PDE model for O2 concentration in the brain capillary blood.

2. A two PDE model for O2 concentration in the brain capillary blood and in the brain tissue, with O2 transport across the blood brain barrier (BBB).

3. The two model extended to three PDEs to include the brain functional neuron cell density.

Cognitive impairment could result from reduced neuron cell density in time and space (in the brain) that follows from lowered O2 concentration (hypoxia).

The computer-based implementation of the example models is presented through routines coded (programmed) in R, a quality, open-source scientific computing system that is readily available from the Internet. Formal mathematics is minimized, e.g., no theorems and proofs. Rather, the presentation is through detailed examples that the reader/researcher/analyst can execute on modest computers. The PDE analysis is based on the method of lines (MOL), an established general algorithm for PDEs, implemented with finite differences.

The routines are available from a download link so that the example models can be executed without having to first study numerical methods and computer coding. The routines can then be applied to variations and extensions of the blood/brain hypoxia models, such as changes in the ODE/PDE parameters (constants) and form of the model equations.

William E. Schiesser is Emeritus McCann Professor of Computational Biomedical Engineering, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and Professor of Mathematics at Lehigh University. His research is directed toward numerical methods and associated software for ordinary, differential-algebraic and partial differential equations (ODE/DAE/PDEs), and the development of mathematical models based on ODE/DAE/PDEs. He is the author, coauthor or coeditor of 30+ books, and his ODE/DAE/PDE computer routines have been accessed by thousands of colleges and universities, corporations and government agencies.

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