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Epicardial Suction : A New Approach to Mechanical Testing of The Passive Ventricular Wall
Oleh:
Okamoto, R. J.
;
Moulton, M. J.
;
Peterson, S. J.
;
Li, D.
;
Pasque, M. K.
;
Guccione, J. M.
Jenis:
Article from Bulletin/Magazine
Dalam koleksi:
Journal of Biomechanical Engineering vol. 122 no. 5 (2000)
,
page 479-487.
Topik:
MECHANICAL
;
epicardial suction
;
mechanical testing
;
passive ventricular
;
wall
Ketersediaan
Perpustakaan Pusat (Semanggi)
Nomor Panggil:
JJ52.2
Non-tandon:
1 (dapat dipinjam: 0)
Tandon:
tidak ada
Lihat Detail Induk
Isi artikel
The lack of an appropriate three - dimensional constitutive relation for stress in passive ventricular myocardium currently limits the utility of existing mathematical models for experimental and clinical applications. Previous experiments used to estimate parameters in three - dimensional constitutive relations, such as biaxial testing of excised myocardial sheets or passive inflation of the isolated arrested heart, have not included significant transverse shear deformation or in - plane compression. Therefore, a new approach has been developed in which suction is applied locally to the ventricular epicardium to introduce a complex deformation in the region of interest, with transmural variations in the magnitude and sign of nearly all six strain components. The resulting deformation is measured throughout the region of interest using magnetic resonance tagging. A nonlinear, three - dimensional, finite element model is used to predict these measurements at several suction pressures. Parameters defining the material properties of this model are optimized by comparing the measured and predicted myocardial deformations. We used this technique to estimate material parameters of the intact passive canine left ventricular free wall using an exponential, transversely isotropic constitutive relation. We tested two possible models of the heart wall : first, that it was homogeneous myocardium, and second, that the myocardium was covered with a thin epicardium with different material properties. For both models, in agreement with previous studies, we found that myocardium was nonlinear and anisotropic with greater stiffness in the fiber direction. We obtained closer agreement to previously published strain data from passive filling when the ventricular wall was modeled as having a separate, isotropic epicardium. These results suggest that epicardium may play a significant role in passive ventricular mechanics.
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