A personalized multiscale model of ventricular cardiac mechanics
ORAL
Abstract
Numerical simulations of the heart are invaluable for investigating cardiovascular disease mechanisms and treatments. Modeling the circulatory system in these simulations is essential to capture physiological cardiac behavior. To reduce computational cost, blood circulation is typically represented with a zero-dimensional (0D) lumped-parameter network (LPN). Previously, we described a novel scheme to couple three-dimensional (3D) cardiac mechanics models with 0D circulatory models using an idealized left ventricle. Here, we extend this coupling scheme to an image-derived biomechanical model of the ventricles, coupled to a closed-loop LPN. The model parameters are personalized to match clinical measurements, including phase-resolved (3D+t) CT images, cuff blood pressures, and electrocardiogram waveforms. We personalize the model by first tuning LPN parameters, then determining the stress-free configuration and passive material parameters of the myocardium, and finally optimizing the active contraction model parameters. Preliminary results show physiological cardiovascular behavior, including the atrioventricular plane motion and reasonable pressure-volume loops. The isovolumic phases of the cardiac cycle are captured without ad hoc treatment. This model can investigate congenital heart defects and surgical interventions and may be extended to four-chamber heart models to simulate whole-heart mechanics.
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Presenters
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Aaron L Brown
Department of Mechanical Engineering Stanford University, Stanford Cardiovascular Institute
Authors
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Aaron L Brown
Department of Mechanical Engineering Stanford University, Stanford Cardiovascular Institute
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Lei Shi
Department of Mechanical Engineering Kennesaw State University
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Matteo Salvador
Institute for Computational and Mathematical Engineering, Stanford University; Stanford Cardiovascular Institute; Department of Pediatrics (Cardiology), Stanford University
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Fanwei Kong
Department of Pediatrics (Cardiology) Stanford University
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Vijay Vedula
Department of Mechanical Engineering Columbia University
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Alison L Marsden
Stanford Cardiovascular Institute; Department of Pediatrics (Cardiology), Stanford University, Stanford University