4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

An axisymmetric boundary integral model for incompressible linear viscoelasticity: Application to the micropipette aspiration contact problem

Journal

Publisher

ASME-AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENG
DOI: 10.1115/1.429654

Keywords

cartilage; osteoarthritis; cell mechanics; chondrocyte; mechanotransduction

Funding

  1. NIAMS NIH HHS [AR-43876] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIA NIH HHS [AG-15768] Funding Source: Medline

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The micropipette aspiration test has been used extensively in recent years as a means of quantifying cellular mechanics and molecular interactions at the microscopic scale. However; previous studies have generally modeled the cell as an infinite half-space bz order to develop an analytical solution for a viscoelastic solid cell. In this study, an axisymmetric boundary integral formulation of the governing equations of incompressible linear viscoelasticity is presented and used to simulate the micropipette aspiration contact problem. The cell is idealized as a homogenous and isotropic continuum with constitutive equation given by three-parameter (E, tau (1), tau (2)) standard linear viscoelasticity. The formulation is used to develop a computational,model via a correspondence principle in which the solution is written as the sum of a homogeneous (elastic part and a rzollhonrpgerzeous part, which depends only on past values of the solution. Via a time-marching scheme, the solution of the viscoelastic problem is obtained by employing art elastic boundary element method with modified boundary conditions. The accuracy and convergence of the time-marching scheme are verified using an analytical solution. An incremental reformulation of the scheme is presented to facilitate the simulation of micropipette aspiration, a nonlinear contact problem. In contrast to the halfspace model (Sato et al, 1990), this computational model accounts for nonlinearities in the cell response that result from a consideration of geometric factors including the finite cell dimension (radius R), curvature of the cell boundary, evolution of the cell-micropipette contact region, and curvature of the ed,Ses of the micropipette (inner radius a edge curvature radius epsilon). Using 60 quadratic boundary elements, a micropipette aspiration creep test with ramp time t* =0.1s and ramp pressure p*/E=0.8 is simulated for the cases a/R =0.3, 0.4, 0.5 using mean parameter values for primary chondrocytes. Comparisons to the half-space model indicate that the computational model predicts an aspiration length that is less stiff during the initial ramp response (t=0-1 s) but more stiff at equilibrium (t =200 s) Overall, rite ramp and equilibrium predictions of aspiration length by the computational model are fairly insensitive to aspect ratio a/R but can differ from the half-space model by np to 20 per-cent. This computational approach may be readily extended to account for more complex geometries or inhomogeneities in Cellular-properties.

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