In vivo mechanical characterization of arterial wall using an inverse analysis procedure: application on an animal model of intracranial aneurysm

Author:

Raviol J.1,Plet G.1,Langlois J. B.2,Si-Mohamed S.34,Magoariec H.1,Pailler-Mattei C.15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ecole Centrale de Lyon, CNRS, ENTPE, LTDS, UMR 5513 , Écully 69130, France

2. CERMEP - Imagerie du Vivant , Bron 69500, France

3. Université de Lyon, INSA Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, UJM-Saint Etienne, CNRS, Inserm, CREATIS UMR 5220, U1206, F69621 , Villeurbanne 69100, France

4. Département de Radiologie, Hôpital Louis Pradel, Hospices Civils de Lyon , Bron 69677, France

5. Université de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, ISPB-Faculté de Pharmacie , Lyon 69008, France

Abstract

Intracranial aneurysm is a pathology related to the deterioration of the arterial wall. This work is an essential part of a large-scale project aimed at providing clinicians with a non-invasive patient-specific decision support tool to facilitate the rupture risk assessment. It will lean on the link between the aneurysm shape clinically observed and a database derived from the in vivo mechanical characterization of aneurysms. To supply this database, a deformation device prototype of the arterial wall was developed. Its use coupled with medical imaging (spectral photon-counting computed tomography providing a spatial resolution down to 250 μm) is used to determine the in vivo mechanical properties of the wall based on the inverse analysis of the quantification of the wall deformation observed experimentally. This study presents the in vivo application of this original procedure to an animal model of aneurysm. The mechanical properties of the aneurysm wall identified were consistent with the literature, and the errors between the numerical and experimental results were less than 10%. Based on these parameters, this study allows the assessment of the aneurysm stress state for a known solicitation and points towards the definition of a rupture criterion.

Publisher

The Royal Society

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