DocumentCode :
3853166
Title :
Structural Identifiability and Practical Applicability of an Alveolar Recruitment Model for ARDS Patients
Author :
Christoph Schranz;Paul D. Docherty;Yeong Shiong Chiew;J. Geoffrey Chase;Knut Möller
Author_Institution :
Institute of Technical Medicine , Furtwangen University, Germany
Volume :
59
Issue :
12
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
3396
Lastpage :
3404
Abstract :
Patient-specific mathematical models of respiratory mechanics can offer substantial insight into patient state and pulmonary dynamics that are not directly measurable. Thus, they offer significant potential to evaluate and guide patient-specific lung protective ventilator strategies for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) patients. To assure bedside applicability, the model must be computationally efficient and identifiable from the limited available data, while also capturing dominant dynamics and trends observed in ARDS patients. In this study, an existing static recruitment model is enhanced by considering alveolar distension and implemented in a novel time-continuous dynamic respiratory mechanics model. The model was tested for structural identifiability and a hierarchical gradient descent approach was used to fit the model to low-flow test responses of 12 ARDS patients. Finally, a comprehensive practical identifiability analysis was performed to evaluate the impact of data quality on the model parameters. Identified parameter values were physiologically plausible and very accurately reproduced the measured pressure responses. Structural identifiability of the model was proven, but practical identifiability analysis of the results showed a lack of convexity on the error surface indicating that successful parameter identification is currently not assured in all test sets. Overall, the model presented is physiologically and clinically relevant, captures ARDS dynamics, and uses clinically descriptive parameters. The patient-specific models show the ability to capture pulmonary dynamics directly relevant to patient condition and clinical guidance. These characteristics currently cannot be directly measured or established without such a validated model.
Keywords :
"Mathematical model","Lungs","Atmospheric modeling","Parameter estimation","Computational modeling","Polynomials"
Journal_Title :
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2012.2216526
Filename :
6293869
Link To Document :
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