4.4 Article

Effect of biomaterial stiffness on cardiac mechanics in a biventricular infarcted rat heart model with microstructural representation of in situ intramyocardial injectate

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cnm.3693

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biomaterial injection therapy; cardiac mechanics; finite element method; myocardial infarction

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This study developed a three-dimensional finite element model of a rat heart with left ventricular infarction and microstructurally dispersed biomaterial. The effect of injectate stiffness on cardiac mechanics was investigated through parametric simulations. The study found that increasing injectate stiffness led to a decrease in myocardial strain and injectate principal strains. The developed model has potential for further research on cellular injectates and mechanotransduction in the infarcted heart.
Intramyocardial delivery of biomaterials is a promising concept for treating myocardial infarction. The delivered biomaterial provides mechanical support and attenuates wall thinning and elevated wall stress in the infarct region. This study aimed at developing a biventricular finite element model of an infarcted rat heart with a microstructural representation of an in situ biomaterial injectate, and a parametric investigation of the effect of the injectate stiffness on the cardiac mechanics. A three-dimensional subject-specific biventricular finite element model of a rat heart with left ventricular infarct and microstructurally dispersed biomaterial delivered 1 week after infarct induction was developed from ex vivo microcomputed tomography data. The volumetric mesh density varied between 303 mm(-3) in the myocardium and 3852 mm(-3) in the injectate region due to the microstructural intramyocardial dispersion. Parametric simulations were conducted with the injectate's elastic modulus varying from 4.1 to 405,900 kPa, and myocardial and injectate strains were recorded. With increasing injectate stiffness, the end-diastolic median myocardial fibre and cross-fibre strain decreased in magnitude from 3.6% to 1.1% and from -6.0% to -2.9%, respectively. At end-systole, the myocardial fibre and cross-fibre strain decreased in magnitude from -20.4% to -11.8% and from 6.5% to 4.6%, respectively. In the injectate, the maximum and minimum principal strains decreased in magnitude from 5.4% to 0.001% and from -5.4% to -0.001%, respectively, at end-diastole and from 38.5% to 0.06% and from -39.0% to -0.06%, respectively, at end-systole. With the microstructural injectate geometry, the developed subject-specific cardiac finite element model offers potential for extension to cellular injectates and in silico studies of mechanotransduction and therapeutic signalling in the infarcted heart with an infarct animal model extensively used in preclinical research.

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