4.5 Article

Multiscale Coupling of One-dimensional Vascular Models and Elastic Tissues

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 49, Issue 12, Pages 3243-3254

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-021-02804-0

Keywords

Vascularized tissues; Immersed methods; Finite element methods; Finite volume methods

Funding

  1. National Research Projects (PRIN 2017) ''Numerical Analysis for Full and Reduced Order Methods for the efficient and accurate solution of complex systems governed by Partial Differential Equations'' - Italian Ministry of Education, University, and Research

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This study introduces a computational multiscale model for simulating vascularized tissues efficiently, comprising an elastic matrix and a vascular network. The model is capable of reproducing tissue responses at the effective scale while modeling microscale vasculature.
We present a computational multiscale model for the efficient simulation of vascularized tissues, composed of an elastic three-dimensional matrix and a vascular network. The effect of blood vessel pressure on the elastic tissue is surrogated via hyper-singular forcing terms in the elasticity equations, which depend on the fluid pressure. In turn, the blood flow in vessels is treated as a one-dimensional network. Intravascular pressure and velocity are simulated using a high-order finite volume scheme, while the elasticity equations for the tissue are solved using a finite element method. This work addresses the feasibility and the potential of the proposed coupled multiscale model. In particular, we assess whether the multiscale model is able to reproduce the tissue response at the effective scale (of the order of millimeters) while modeling the vasculature at the microscale. We validate the multiscale method against a full scale (three-dimensional) model, where the fluid/tissue interface is fully discretized and treated as a Neumann boundary for the elasticity equation. Next, we present simulation results obtained with the proposed approach in a realistic scenario, demonstrating that the method can robustly and efficiently handle the one-way coupling between complex fluid microstructures and the elastic matrix.

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