Arterial tissues and their inflammatory response to collagen damage

A continuum in silico model coupling nonlinear mechanics, molecular pathways, and cell behavior

verfasst von
Meike Gierig, Peter Wriggers, Michele Marino
Abstract

Damage in soft biological tissues causes an inflammatory reaction that initiates a chain of events to repair the tissue. This work presents a continuum model and its in silico implementation that describe the cascade of mechanisms leading to tissue healing, coupling mechanical as well as chemo-biological processes. The mechanics is described by means of a Lagrangian nonlinear continuum mechanics framework and follows the homogenized constrained mixtures theory. Plastic-like damage, growth and remodeling as well as homeostasis are taken into account. The chemo-biological pathways account for two molecular and four cellular species, and are activated by damage of collagen molecules in fibers. To consider proliferation, differentiation, diffusion and chemotaxis of species, diffusion–advection–reaction equations are employed. To the best of authors’ knowledge, the proposed model combines for the first time such high number of chemo-mechano-biological mechanisms in a consistent continuum biomechanical framework. The resulting set of coupled differential equations describe balance of linear momentum, evolution of kinematic variables as well as mass balance equations. They are discretized in time according to a backward Euler finite difference scheme, and in space through a finite element Galerkin discretization. The features of the model are firstly demonstrated presenting the species dynamics and highlighting the influence of damage intensities on the growth outcome. In terms of a biaxial test, the chemo-mechano-biological coupling and the model's applicability to reproduce normal as well as pathological healing are shown. A last numerical example underlines the model's applicability to complex loading scenarios and inhomogeneous damage distributions. Concluding, the present work contributes towards comprehensive in silico models in biomechanics and mechanobiology.

Organisationseinheit(en)
Institut für Kontinuumsmechanik
Typ
Artikel
Journal
Computers in biology and medicine
Band
158
ISSN
0010-4825
Publikationsdatum
05.2023
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Angewandte Informatik, Gesundheitsinformatik
Elektronische Version(en)
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compbiomed.2023.106811 (Zugang: Geschlossen)
 

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