4.5 Article

Subject-specific multiscale modeling of aortic valve biomechanics

期刊

BIOMECHANICS AND MODELING IN MECHANOBIOLOGY
卷 20, 期 3, 页码 1031-1046

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10237-021-01429-5

关键词

Aortic valve; Valve interstitial cells; Multiscale approach; Subject-specific simulations; Finite element modeling

资金

  1. Politecnico di Milano within the CRUI-CARE Agreement

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A Finite Element workflow was developed for multiscale analysis of aortic valve biomechanics, capturing the impact of anatomical features on the biomechanical environment from organ to cell scale. The study found that the dependency of leaflet biomechanics on leaflet-specific anatomy observed at the organ length-scale is reflected in the results obtained at lower length-scales.
A Finite Element workflow for the multiscale analysis of the aortic valve biomechanics was developed and applied to three physiological anatomies with the aim of describing the aortic valve interstitial cells biomechanical milieu in physiological conditions, capturing the effect of subject-specific and leaflet-specific anatomical features from the organ down to the cell scale. A mixed approach was used to transfer organ-scale information down to the cell-scale. Displacement data from the organ model were used to impose kinematic boundary conditions to the tissue model, while stress data from the latter were used to impose loading boundary conditions to the cell level. Peak of radial leaflet strains was correlated with leaflet extent variability at the organ scale, while circumferential leaflet strains varied over a narrow range of values regardless of leaflet extent. The dependency of leaflet biomechanics on the leaflet-specific anatomy observed at the organ length-scale is reflected, and to some extent emphasized, into the results obtained at the lower length-scales. At the tissue length-scale, the peak diastolic circumferential and radial stresses computed in the fibrosa correlated with the leaflet surface area. At the cell length-scale, the difference between the strains in two main directions, and between the respective relationships with the specific leaflet anatomy, was even more evident; cell strains in the radial direction varied over a relatively wide range (0.36 - 0.87) with a strong correlation with the organ length-scale radial strain (R-2 = 0.95); conversely, circumferential cell strains spanned a very narrow range (0.75 - 0.88) showing no correlation with the circumferential strain at the organ level (R-2 = 0.02). Within the proposed simulation framework, being able to account for the actual anatomical features of the aortic valve leaflets allowed to gain insight into their effect on the structural mechanics of the leaflets at all length- scales, down to the cell scale.

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