Ryan R Mahutga, Ruturaj M Badal, Victor H Barocas, Patrick W Alford
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A multiscale discrete fiber model of failure in heterogeneous tissues: Applications to remodeled cerebral aneurysms.
Damage-accumulation failure models are broadly used to examine tissue property changes caused by mechanical loading. However, damage accumulation models are purely phenomenological. The underlying justification in using this type of model is often that damage occurs to the extracellular fibers and/or cells which changes the fundamental mechanical behavior of the system. In this work, we seek to align damage accumulation models with microstructural models to predict alterations in the mechanical behavior of biological materials that arise from structural heterogeneity associated with nonuniform remodeling of tissues. Further, we seek to extend this multiscale model toward assessing catastrophic failure events such as cerebral aneurysm rupture. First, we demonstrate that a model made up of linear elastin and actin and nonlinear collagen fibers can replicate bot the pre-failure and failure tissue-scale mechanics of uniaxially-stretched cerebral aneurysms. Next, we investigate how mechanical heterogeneities, like those observed in cerebral aneurysms, influence fiber and tissue failure. Notably, we find that failure occurs and the interface between regions of high and low material stiffness, suggesting that spatial mechanical heterogeneity influences aneurysm failure behavior. This model system is a step toward linking structural changes in growth and remodeling to failure properties.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Biomechanics publishes reports of original and substantial findings using the principles of mechanics to explore biological problems. Analytical, as well as experimental papers may be submitted, and the journal accepts original articles, surveys and perspective articles (usually by Editorial invitation only), book reviews and letters to the Editor. The criteria for acceptance of manuscripts include excellence, novelty, significance, clarity, conciseness and interest to the readership.
Papers published in the journal may cover a wide range of topics in biomechanics, including, but not limited to:
-Fundamental Topics - Biomechanics of the musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, and respiratory systems, mechanics of hard and soft tissues, biofluid mechanics, mechanics of prostheses and implant-tissue interfaces, mechanics of cells.
-Cardiovascular and Respiratory Biomechanics - Mechanics of blood-flow, air-flow, mechanics of the soft tissues, flow-tissue or flow-prosthesis interactions.
-Cell Biomechanics - Biomechanic analyses of cells, membranes and sub-cellular structures; the relationship of the mechanical environment to cell and tissue response.
-Dental Biomechanics - Design and analysis of dental tissues and prostheses, mechanics of chewing.
-Functional Tissue Engineering - The role of biomechanical factors in engineered tissue replacements and regenerative medicine.
-Injury Biomechanics - Mechanics of impact and trauma, dynamics of man-machine interaction.
-Molecular Biomechanics - Mechanical analyses of biomolecules.
-Orthopedic Biomechanics - Mechanics of fracture and fracture fixation, mechanics of implants and implant fixation, mechanics of bones and joints, wear of natural and artificial joints.
-Rehabilitation Biomechanics - Analyses of gait, mechanics of prosthetics and orthotics.
-Sports Biomechanics - Mechanical analyses of sports performance.