Estimation of in vivo mechanical properties of the aortic wall: A multi-resolution direct search approach

The patient-specific biomechanical analysis of the aorta requires in vivo mechanical properties of individual patients. Existing approaches for estimating in vivo material properties often demand high computational cost and mesh correspondence of the aortic wall between different cardiac phases. In...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials Vol. 77; pp. 649 - 659
Main Authors Liu, Minliang, Liang, Liang, Sun, Wei
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands 01.01.2018
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ISSN1751-6161
1878-0180
1878-0180
DOI10.1016/j.jmbbm.2017.10.022

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Summary:The patient-specific biomechanical analysis of the aorta requires in vivo mechanical properties of individual patients. Existing approaches for estimating in vivo material properties often demand high computational cost and mesh correspondence of the aortic wall between different cardiac phases. In this paper, we propose a novel multi-resolution direct search (MRDS) approach for estimation of the nonlinear, anisotropic constitutive parameters of the aortic wall. Based on the finite element (FE) updating scheme, the MRDS approach consists of the following three steps: (1) representing constitutive parameters with multiple resolutions using principal component analysis (PCA), (2) building links between the discretized PCA spaces at different resolutions, and (3) searching the PCA spaces in a 'coarse to fine' fashion following the links. The estimation of material parameters is achieved by minimizing a node-to-surface error function, which does not need mesh correspondence. The method was validated through a numerical experiment by using the in vivo data from a patient with ascending thoracic aortic aneurysm (ATAA), the results show that the number of FE iterations was significantly reduced compared to previous methods. The approach was also applied to the in vivo CT data from an aged healthy human patient, and using the estimated material parameters, the FE-computed geometry was well matched with the image-derived geometry. This novel MRDS approach may facilitate the personalized biomechanical analysis of aortic tissues, such as the rupture risk analysis of ATAA, which requires fast feedback to clinicians.
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These authors contributed equally to this work and should be considered as co-first authors.
ISSN:1751-6161
1878-0180
1878-0180
DOI:10.1016/j.jmbbm.2017.10.022