Biology and Mechanics of Blood Flows presents the basic knowledge and
state-of-the-art techniques necessary to carry out investigations of the
cardiovascular system using modeling and simulation. Part I of this
two-volume sequence, Biology, addresses the nanoscopic and microscopic
scales. The nanoscale corresponds to the scale of biochemical reaction
cascades involved in cell adaptation to mechanical stresses among other
stimuli. The microscale is the scale of stress-induced tissue remodeling
associated with acute or chronic loadings. The cardiovascular system,
like any physiological system, has a complicated three-dimensional
structure and composition. Its time dependent behavior is regulated, and
this complex system has many components. In this authoritative work, the
author provides a survey of relevant cell components and processes, with
detailed coverage of the electrical and mechanical behaviors of vascular
cells, tissues, and organs. Because the behaviors of vascular cells and
tissues are tightly coupled to the mechanics of flowing blood, the major
features of blood flows and the Navier-Stokes equations of mass and
momentum conservation are introduced at the conclusion of this volume.
This book will appeal to any biologist, chemist, physicist, or applied
mathematician with an interest in the functioning of the cardiovascular
system.