Flow Patterns and Particle Residence Times in the Oral Cavity during Inhaled Drug Delivery.
Brenda Vara AlmirallKiao InthavongKimberley BradshawNarinder SinghAaron M JohnsonPippa StoreyHana SalatiPublished in: Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Pulmonary drug delivery aims to deliver particles deep into the lungs, bypassing the mouth-throat airway geometry. However, micron particles under high flow rates are susceptible to inertial impaction on anatomical sites that serve as a defense system to filter and prevent foreign particles from entering the lungs. The aim of this study was to understand particle aerodynamics and its possible deposition in the mouth-throat airway that inhibits pulmonary drug delivery. In this study, we present an analysis of the aerodynamics of inhaled particles inside a patient-specific mouth-throat model generated from MRI scans. Computational Fluid Dynamics with a Discrete Phase Model for tracking particles was used to characterize the airflow patterns for a constant inhalation flow rate of 30 L/min. Monodisperse particles with diameters of 7 μm to 26 μm were introduced to the domain within a 3 cm-diameter sphere in front of the oral cavity. The main outcomes of this study showed that the time taken for particle deposition to occur was 0.5 s; a narrow stream of particles (medially and superiorly) were transported by the flow field; larger particles > 20 μm deposited onto the oropharnyx, while smaller particles < 12 μm were more disperse throughout the oral cavity and navigated the curved geometry and laryngeal jet to escape through the tracheal outlet. It was concluded that at a flow rate of 30 L/min the particle diameters depositing on the larynx and trachea in this specific patient model are likely to be in the range of 7 μm to 16 μm. Particles larger than 16 μm primarily deposited on the oropharynx.