验证头部旋转加速度小鼠脑部生物力学计算模型

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 BIOPHYSICS Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology Pub Date : 2024-04-25 DOI:10.1007/s10237-024-01843-5
Connor Bradfield, Liming Voo, Anindya Bhaduri, K. T. Ramesh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

最近的小鼠脑损伤实验研究了头部加速旋转造成的弥漫性轴突损伤。评估这些事件中的大脑变形将为脑损伤的组织水平阈值提供有价值的信息,但在动态加载事件(如钝头撞击)中对大脑的机械响应成像存在许多挑战。为了弥补这一不足,我们提出了一个经过实验验证的小鼠大脑计算生物力学模型,该模型可根据实验室实验中小鼠头部的运动情况预测组织变形。首先,我们开发了一个小鼠大脑有限元模型,在头部旋转与之前进行的原位半头小鼠大脑实验相同的情况下,该模型可以计算组织应变。其次,我们使用单个脑区对模型进行了校准,然后根据其他区域的空间和时间应变反应对模型进行了验证。最终,研究人员可以利用这一计算工具预测小鼠实验室实验中出现的脑组织应变,并将实验与由此产生的神经病理学(如弥漫性轴索损伤)联系起来。
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Validation of a computational biomechanical mouse brain model for rotational head acceleration

Recent mouse brain injury experiments examine diffuse axonal injury resulting from accelerative head rotations. Evaluating brain deformation during these events would provide valuable information on tissue level thresholds for brain injury, but there are many challenges to imaging the brain’s mechanical response during dynamic loading events, such as a blunt head impact. To address this shortcoming, we present an experimentally validated computational biomechanics model of the mouse brain that predicts tissue deformation, given the motion of the mouse head during laboratory experiments. First, we developed a finite element model of the mouse brain that computes tissue strains, given the same head rotations as previously conducted in situ hemicephalic mouse brain experiments. Second, we calibrated the model using a single brain segment, and then validated the model based on the spatial and temporal strain responses of other regions. The result is a computational tool that will provide researchers with the ability to predict brain tissue strains that occur during mouse laboratory experiments, and to link the experiments to the resulting neuropathology, such as diffuse axonal injury.

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来源期刊
Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology
Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology 工程技术-工程:生物医学
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
8.60%
发文量
119
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Mechanics regulates biological processes at the molecular, cellular, tissue, organ, and organism levels. A goal of this journal is to promote basic and applied research that integrates the expanding knowledge-bases in the allied fields of biomechanics and mechanobiology. Approaches may be experimental, theoretical, or computational; they may address phenomena at the nano, micro, or macrolevels. Of particular interest are investigations that (1) quantify the mechanical environment in which cells and matrix function in health, disease, or injury, (2) identify and quantify mechanosensitive responses and their mechanisms, (3) detail inter-relations between mechanics and biological processes such as growth, remodeling, adaptation, and repair, and (4) report discoveries that advance therapeutic and diagnostic procedures. Especially encouraged are analytical and computational models based on solid mechanics, fluid mechanics, or thermomechanics, and their interactions; also encouraged are reports of new experimental methods that expand measurement capabilities and new mathematical methods that facilitate analysis.
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