On the Sensitivity of Wall Stresses in Diseased Arteries to Variable Material Properties
Author:
Williamson, S. D.1, Lam, Y.1, Younis, H. F.1, Huang, H.1, Patel, S.1, Kaazempur-Mofrad, and M. R.1, Kamm R. D.1
Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Biological Engineering Division, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139
Abstract
Accurate estimates of stress in an atherosclerotic lesion require knowledge of the material properties of its components (e.g., normal wall, fibrous plaque, calcified regions, lipid pools) that can only be approximated. This leads to considerable uncertainty in these computational predictions. A study was conducted to test the sensitivity of predicted levels of stress and strain to the parameter values of plaque used in finite element analysis. Results show that the stresses within the arterial wall, fibrous plaque, calcified plaque, and lipid pool have low sensitivities for variation in the elastic modulus. Even a ±50% variation in elastic modulus leads to less than a 10% change in stress at the site of rupture. Sensitivity to variations in elastic modulus is comparable between isotropic nonlinear, isotropic nonlinear with residual strains, and transversely isotropic linear models. Therefore, stress analysis may be used with confidence that uncertainty in the material properties generates relatively small errors in the prediction of wall stresses. Either isotropic nonlinear or anisotropic linear models provide useful estimates, however the predictions in regions of stress concentration (e.g., the site of rupture) are somewhat more sensitive to the specific model used, increasing by up to 30% from the isotropic nonlinear to orthotropic model in the present example. Changes resulting from the introduction of residual stresses are much smaller.
Publisher
ASME International
Subject
Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering
Reference13 articles.
1. Cheng, G. C., Loree, H. M., Kamm, R. D., Fishbein, M. C., and Lee, R. T., 1993, “Distribution of Circumferential Stress in Ruptured and Stable Atherosclerotic Lesions,” Circulation, 1179–1187. 2. Richardson, P. D., Davies, M. J., and Born, G. V. R., 1989, “Influence of Plaque Configuration and Stress Distribution on Fissuring of Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaques,” Lancet, pp. 941–944 3. Humphrey, J. D.
, 1995, “Mechanics of the Arterial Wall: Review and Directions,” Crit. Rev. Biomed. Eng., 23, pp. 82–90. 4. Loree, H. M., Grodzinsky, A. J., Park, S. Y., Gibson, L. J., and Lee, R. T., 1994, “Static Circumferential Tangential Modulus of Human Atherosclerotic Tissue,” J. Biomech., 27, pp. 195–204. 5. Patel, D. J., Janicki, J. S., and Carew, T. E., 1969, “Static Anisotropic Elastic Properties of the Aorta in Living Dogs,” Circ. Res., 25, pp. 765–779.
Cited by
89 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|