A Patient-Specific Morphoelastic Growth Model of Aortic Dissection Evolution.
Kameel KhabazJunsung KimRoss MilnerNhung NguyenLuka PocivavsekPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
The human aorta undergoes complex morphologic changes that indicate the evolution of disease. Finite element analysis enables the prediction of aortic pathologic states, but the absence of a biomechanical understanding hinders the applicability of this computational tool. We incorporate geometric information from computed tomography angiography (CTA) imaging scans into finite element analysis (FEA) to predict a trajectory of future geometries for four aortic disease patients. Through defining a geometric correspondence between two patient scans separated in time, a patient-specific FEA model can recreate the deformation of the aorta between the two time points, showing pathologic growth drives morphologic heterogeneity. A shape-size geometric feature space plotting the variance of the shape index versus the inverse square root of aortic surface area (δ𝒮 vs. ) quantitatively demonstrates the simulated breakdown in aortic shape. An increase in δ𝒮 closely parallels the true geometric progression of aortic disease patients.
Keyphrases
- aortic dissection
- aortic valve
- pulmonary artery
- finite element analysis
- end stage renal disease
- left ventricular
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- coronary artery
- prognostic factors
- pulmonary hypertension
- endothelial cells
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- magnetic resonance
- heart failure
- magnetic resonance imaging
- case report
- high resolution
- patient reported outcomes
- photodynamic therapy
- lymph node
- fluorescence imaging
- contrast enhanced
- atrial fibrillation
- finite element