Title of article :
Patient-specific models of cardiac biomechanics
Author/Authors :
Krishnamurthy، نويسنده , , Adarsh and Villongco، نويسنده , , Christopher T. and Chuang، نويسنده , , Joyce and Frank، نويسنده , , Lawrence R. and Nigam، نويسنده , , Vishal and Belezzuoli، نويسنده , , Ernest and Stark، نويسنده , , Paul and Krummen، نويسنده , , David E. and Narayan، نويسنده , , Sanjiv and Omens، نويسنده , , Jeffrey H. and McCulloch، نويسنده , , Andrew D. and Kerckhoffs، نويسنده , , Roy C.P. Kerckhoffs، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
18
From page :
4
To page :
21
Abstract :
Patient-specific models of cardiac function have the potential to improve diagnosis and management of heart disease by integrating medical images with heterogeneous clinical measurements subject to constraints imposed by physical first principles and prior experimental knowledge. We describe new methods for creating three-dimensional patient-specific models of ventricular biomechanics in the failing heart. Three-dimensional bi-ventricular geometry is segmented from cardiac CT images at end-diastole from patients with heart failure. Human myofiber and sheet architecture is modeled using eigenvectors computed from diffusion tensor MR images from an isolated, fixed human organ-donor heart and transformed to the patient-specific geometric model using large deformation diffeomorphic mapping. Semi-automated methods were developed for optimizing the passive material properties while simultaneously computing the unloaded reference geometry of the ventricles for stress analysis. Material properties of active cardiac muscle contraction were optimized to match ventricular pressures measured by cardiac catheterization, and parameters of a lumped-parameter closed-loop model of the circulation were estimated with a circulatory adaptation algorithm making use of information derived from echocardiography. These components were then integrated to create a multi-scale model of the patient-specific heart. These methods were tested in five heart failure patients from the San Diego Veteran’s Affairs Medical Center who gave informed consent. The simulation results showed good agreement with measured echocardiographic and global functional parameters such as ejection fraction and peak cavity pressures.
Keywords :
Cardiac biomechanics , Patient-specific models , Fiber architecture , Heart Failure , Unloaded geometry , Finite elements
Journal title :
Journal of Computational Physics
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Journal of Computational Physics
Record number :
1485480
Link To Document :
بازگشت