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Vessels’ biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine “D. Campanacci” University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi – [email protected] Doctor Marco Manca – [email protected] Marco Manca, MD
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Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Mar 31, 2015

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Page 1: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Vessels’ biomechanics – A matter of fact

Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies andClinical Medicine “D. Campanacci”

University of Bologna

Professor Claudio Borghi – [email protected] Marco Manca – [email protected]

Marco Manca, MD

Page 2: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

“Forecasting is difficult,especially when it the future.”

Niels Bohr (1885-1962)father of quantum mechanics

Page 3: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

The arterial wall is a layered structure with distinct sections identifiable as:

•Intima

•Media

•Adventitia

Page 4: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

The wall is comprised of cells, elastin, and collagen, and the distribution of these elements varies from the inner wall to the outer wall, as well as along the vascular tree.

Page 5: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Second panel: Pressure changes in the transmission line model. Mean pressure is sustained in the transmission line, but falls steeply at its termination with small resistance vessels. Wave reflection at the junction causes higher pulsatile pressurechanges at the end of the model than at its origin.Third panel: Resistance per unit length in the model.Fourth panel: Pressure waveform at the origin of the transmission line when aortic stiffness is low, as in adolescents.Fifth panel: Pressure waveform at the origin of the transmission line when aortic stiffness is high, as occurs with aging. Higher aortic pulse wave velocity causes the echo from wave reflection to move from diastole into systole, thus boosting aortic systolic pressure and reducing pressure during diastole.

O’Rourke MF Journal of Biomechanics, 2002

Page 6: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

X-ray diffraction patterns from dog carotid air-dried under pressure recorded with the incident beam along the radial (a) and circumferential (b) directions. The arrow in (b) indicates the 0.29 nm collagene reflection.

Pallotti G et al. Journal of mechanics in medicine and biology, 2002

Page 7: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Arteries are:

• Nonlinear

• Anisotropic

• Viscoelastic

A comprehensive constitutive equation remains an elusive goal

Page 8: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Incompressibility

Incompressibility is a reasonable assumption in that biological tissues contain mostly water, which is incompressible at physiologic pressures:

Vaishnav RN et al. Circulation Research, 1973

Page 9: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Residual stresses

Blood vessels are formed in a dynamic environment, which gives rise to imbalances between the forces tending to extend the diameter, and length and the internal forces which tend to resist this extension. This imbalance is thought to drive the deposition of elastin and collagen which reduce the stress in the underlying tissue.Under these conditions it is not surprising that a residual stress state exists when the vessel is fully retracted and free from external traction.

A longitudinal cut in an arterial section results in the “unrolling” of the artery.

Bergel DH PhD Thesis - University of Londond, 1960.

Page 10: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Residual stresses

Including residual stress in arterial models results in a more uniform distribution of stress, noticeably decreasing stress at the intimal layer, as compared to models without residual stress.Current models incorporate residual stress using a cut-open ring segment as the zero-stress state.

In one approach, the opening angle is measured and included in the circumferential stretch ratio used to calculate strain. This method uses incompressibility to relate the radii and opening angle

Humphrey JD et al. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 2002.

Page 11: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Smooth muscles’ contractility

Smooth muscle modifies with its contraction the dynamic properties of the arterial walls.

One way of modeling smooth muscle contractility is the use of different functional forms for the active and passive circumferential stress:

Rachev A et al. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 1999

The total circumferential stress is the sum of the active and passive components.

Page 12: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Smooth muscles’ contractility

Pressure waves recorded simultaneously in the proximal aorta and radial artery of a young man (A) under control conditions, and (B–D) with exercise or increasing intensity.

O’Rourke MF Journal of Biomechanics, 2002

Page 13: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Pressure-Related Dynamic Wall Motion

If (R, Θ, Z) and (r, θ, z) are the cylindrical polar coordinates of a body before and after deformation, wall motion caused by time-dependent internal pressure and axial force may be described as:

Demiray H et al. Journal of Biomechanics, 1983

Page 14: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Strain Energy Density Functions

Special attention is due to Strain Energy Density Functions. These are a convenient, commonly used way to derive a constitutive equation for a biological tissue.

Strain energy is a function of the deformation gradient tensor, F, and various unknown parameters

Green AE et al. Large Elastic Deformations. Oxford: Clarendon. 2nd ed., 1970

Page 15: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Pseudoelastic models

The vessel is treated as one hyperelastic material in loading and another in unloading

Fung YC et al. American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 1979

The approach is simple and captures vessel deformation.Pseudoelastic models form the backbone of other model types.

The equation separately models loading or unloading data.Data multicollinearity leads to unstable parameters and protocol dependence if

incremental loading methods are used.

Page 16: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Randomly elastic models

The strain response is centered around a definite value that lies on a well-defined curve

Brossollet LJ et al. Journal of Biomechanics, 1995

The equation models both loading and unloading data simultaneously

Data are noisier than when separately modeling loading or unloading values

Page 17: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Poroelastic models

The tissue is treated as a fluid-saturated porous medium.Due to their complexity, they are well suited for FEM implementation.

Simon BR et al. Journal of Biomechanical Engineering, 1998

The equation models the fluid contribution to tissue properties

The movement of fluid through the porous tissue may be irrelevant within the timescale of the experiment. Nonlinear models include many unknown parameters.

Page 18: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Viscoelastic models

The strain response is a function of the stress history.

Armentano RL et al. Circulation Research, 1995

The equation models observed viscoelastic behavior (creep, hysteresis, and stress relaxation)

The response is usually modeled using a discrete number of elements.Data from one viscoelastic test may be insufficient to model characteristics from other

viscoelastic tests

Page 19: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Applications

Applications of blood vessel constitutive models include studies comparing healthy and diseased populations and studies that help with understanding or predicting the initiation, progression, and clinical treatment of diseases such as atherosclerosis.

Page 20: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

One clinical treatment for stenosed vessels involves the use of stenting, whereby an expandable mesh tube is deployed at the stenosis site to reinforce the lumen.

A goal of stenting studies is to understand the effect of the deployed stent on blood vessel properties and determine the resulting biological response.

FEM has been shown to be a useful tool for the study of free stent expansion, balloon-stent interactions, and stent-wall interactions. In most approaches, simple linear-elastic models have been used for the artery, stent, and balloon.

Stenting

Holzapfel GA et al. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 2002

Page 21: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Combined in vivo and in vitro experiments have been conducted in which a stent was harvested from a rabbit iliac artery in which it had been deployed an hour earlier.In a complementary experiment, a stent was deployed in a transparent glass tube to observe when and how the stent made contact with the tube and when and how the dilating balloon made contact with the tube.

The observation and later modeling were aimed to describe how balloon-artery interactions contribute to vascular injury in an effort to recommend new stent designs and deployment protocols.

Stenting

Rogers C et al. Circulation Research, 1999

Page 22: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

A drug-eluting stent is a device releasing into the bloodstream single or multiple bioactive agents that can deposit in or affect tissues adjacent to the stent. Drug can besimply linked to the stent surface, embedded and released from within polymer materials, or surrounded by and released through a carrier.

Drug eluting stents

Fattori R et al. Lancet, 2003

Page 23: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.

Conclusions

The bioengineer has more to contribute to medicine than he/she ever has in the past.

Clinician and engineer must be prepared to compromise, but to know where compromise is warranted, and where it is not.

Mathematical modeling has to be driven not only by the need of achieving practical goals but also by the need to produce new consciousness in physicians approaching the clinics.

Page 24: Vessels biomechanics – A matter of fact Dept. of Applied Biotechnologies and Clinical Medicine D. Campanacci University of Bologna Professor Claudio Borghi.