| Literature DB >> 28224760 |
Nicolas Pozin1,2,3, Spyridon Montesantos3, Ira Katz3,4, Marine Pichelin3, Irene Vignon-Clementel1,2, Céline Grandmont1,2.
Abstract
In this article, we develop a lung ventilation model. The parenchyma is described as an elastic homogenized media. It is irrigated by a space-filling dyadic resistive pipe network, which represents the tracheobronchial tree. In this model, the tree and the parenchyma are strongly coupled. The tree induces an extra viscous term in the system constitutive relation, which leads, in the finite element framework, to a full matrix. We consider an efficient algorithm that takes advantage of the tree structure to enable a fast matrix-vector product computation. This framework can be used to model both free and mechanically induced respiration, in health and disease. Patient-specific lung geometries acquired from computed tomography scans are considered. Realistic Dirichlet boundary conditions can be deduced from surface registration on computed tomography images. The model is compared to a more classical exit compartment approach. Results illustrate the coupling between the tree and the parenchyma, at global and regional levels, and how conditions for the purely 0D model can be inferred. Different types of boundary conditions are tested, including a nonlinear Robin model of the surrounding lung structures.Entities:
Keywords: 0D-3D model coupling; disease modelling; medical image-based boundary conditions; model comparison; respiratory mechanics; spontaneous and mechanical breathing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28224760 DOI: 10.1002/cnm.2873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Numer Method Biomed Eng ISSN: 2040-7939 Impact factor: 2.747