4.5 Article

Linear and Nonlinear Viscoelastic Modeling of Aorta and Carotid Pressure-Area Dynamics Under In Vivo and Ex Vivo Conditions

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 39, Issue 5, Pages 1438-1456

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-010-0236-7

Keywords

Viscoelasticity; Nonlinear elasticity; Arterial wall properties; Thoracic descending aorta; Carotid artery; Mathematical modeling

Funding

  1. Programa para el Desarrollo de las Ciencias Basicas (PEDECI-BA, Uruguay)
  2. Agencia Nacional de Investigacion e Innovacion [FCE-2007-635-Dr. Armentano, FCE-2007-638-Dr. Bia
  3. Uruguay]
  4. United States National Science Foundation [DMS-0616597, DMS-0636590]
  5. United States National Institutes of Health [AG-15768]
  6. Consejo Nacional de Ciencias y Tecnologia (CONACYT, Mexico)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A better understanding of the biomechanical properties of the arterial wall provides important insight into arterial vascular biology under normal (healthy) and pathological conditions. This insight has potential to improve tracking of disease progression and to aid in vascular graft design and implementation. In this study, we use linear and nonlinear viscoelastic models to predict biomechanical properties of the thoracic descending aorta and the carotid artery under ex vivo and in vivo conditions in ovine and human arteries. Models analyzed include a four-parameter (linear) Kelvin viscoelastic model and two five-parameter nonlinear viscoelastic models (an arctangent and a sigmoid model) that relate changes in arterial blood pressure to the vessel cross-sectional area (via estimation of vessel strain). These models were developed using the framework of Quasilinear Viscoelasticity (QLV) theory and were validated using measurements from the thoracic descending aorta and the carotid artery obtained from human and ovine arteries. In vivo measurements were obtained from 10 ovine aortas and 10 human carotid arteries. Ex vivo measurements (from both locations) were made in 11 male Merino sheep. Biomechanical properties were obtained through constrained estimation of model parameters. To further investigate the parameter estimates, we computed standard errors and confidence intervals and we used analysis of variance to compare results within and between groups. Overall, our results indicate that optimal model selection depends on the artery type. Results showed that for the thoracic descending aorta (under both experimental conditions), the best predictions were obtained with the nonlinear sigmoid model, while under healthy physiological pressure loading the carotid arteries nonlinear stiffening with increasing pressure is negligible, and consequently, the linear (Kelvin) viscoelastic model better describes the pressure-area dynamics in this vessel. Results comparing biomechanical properties show that the Kelvin and sigmoid models were able to predict the zero-pressure vessel radius; that under ex vivo conditions vessels are more rigid, and comparatively, that the carotid artery is stiffer than the thoracic descending aorta; and that the viscoelastic gain and relaxation parameters do not differ significantly between vessels or experimental conditions. In conclusion, our study demonstrates that the proposed models can predict pressure-area dynamics and that model parameters can be extracted for further interpretation of biomechanical properties.

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