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. 2019 Aug 14;64(16):165006.
doi: 10.1088/1361-6560/ab2db5.

Development and evaluation of anisotropic and nonlinear aortic models made from clinical images for in vitro experimentation

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Development and evaluation of anisotropic and nonlinear aortic models made from clinical images for in vitro experimentation

Miguel Bernal et al. Phys Med Biol. .

Abstract

In this work we developed a methodology to manufacture a new type of arterial model that could be used in experimental setting instead of excised arteries while developing new imaging modalities. CT-images of the descending aorta were used to create molds with patient specific morphology. A polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) solution with a reinforcing cotton mesh was used to generate the models. The mesh is circumferentially elastic while non-compliant longitudinally and is responsible for the non-linear anisotropic mechanical behavior of the models. Two models were fabricated following the same manufacturing procedure. Their circumferential and longitudinal mechanical properties were evaluated and compared to those of excised healthy pig aortas via tensile testing. A very good agreement was found for the circumferential direction, while the longitudinal direction showed to have a more marked anisotropic behavior compared to the excise arteries. An increase from 113 kPa at 2.5% strain, to 914 kPa at 40% strain was obtained for the models, while the arteries showed an increase from 172 kPa at 2.5% strain to 922 kPa at 38% strain. Furthermore, by plugging the models into a cardiovascular simulator their mechanical response in a more realistic setting was evaluated under static and dynamic pressure conditions by using shear wave elastography (SWE). Static and dynamic experiments showed an increase in the shear modulus as a function of pressure from 61 kPa to 263 kPa, between 20 mmHg and 150 mmHg for Model 1 (similar values within 10% were obtained for Model 2). These values are in good agreement with those reported in the literature for healthy human arteries. To our knowledge the models presented in this study are the first morphologically realistic phantoms that have demonstrated nonlinear and anisotropic elastic behaviors close to those of healthy arteries.

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