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On the Sensitivity Analysis of Porous Finite Element Models for Cerebral Perfusion Estimation.

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TLDR
A one-dimensional model is presented which can serve as a computationally inexpensive replacement of the three-dimensional brain model to ease parameter optimisation, sensitivity analyses and uncertainty quantification and can be generalised to organ-scale porous perfusion models.
Abstract
Computational physiological models are promising tools to enhance the design of clinical trials and to assist in decision making. Organ-scale haemodynamic models are gaining popularity to evaluate perfusion in a virtual environment both in healthy and diseased patients. Recently, the principles of verification, validation, and uncertainty quantification of such physiological models have been laid down to ensure safe applications of engineering software in the medical device industry. The present study sets out to establish guidelines for the usage of a three-dimensional steady state porous cerebral perfusion model of the human brain following principles detailed in the verification and validation (V&V 40) standard of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. The model relies on the finite element method and has been developed specifically to estimate how brain perfusion is altered in ischaemic stroke patients before, during, and after treatments. Simulations are compared with exact analytical solutions and a thorough sensitivity analysis is presented covering every numerical and physiological model parameter. The results suggest that such porous models can approximate blood pressure and perfusion distributions reliably even on a coarse grid with first order elements. On the other hand, higher order elements are essential to mitigate errors in volumetric blood flow rate estimation through cortical surface regions. Matching the volumetric flow rate corresponding to major cerebral arteries is identified as a validation milestone. It is found that inlet velocity boundary conditions are hard to obtain and that constant pressure inlet boundary conditions are feasible alternatives. A one-dimensional model is presented which can serve as a computationally inexpensive replacement of the three-dimensional brain model to ease parameter optimisation, sensitivity analyses and uncertainty quantification. The findings of the present study can be generalised to organ-scale porous perfusion models. The results increase the applicability of computational tools regarding treatment development for stroke and other cerebrovascular conditions.

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American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

TL;DR: In this article, the ASME student competitions/E-fests, scholarships, internships and more are offered to students in the engineering community and real world situations, in and out of the classroom.
Journal ArticleDOI

In silico trials for treatment of acute ischemic stroke: Design and implementation.

TL;DR: In this paper, an event-based modeling approach for the simulation of a disease and injury is proposed, where changes to the state of the system (the events) are assumed to be instantaneous.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical Modelling of the Brain Poromechanics by High-Order Discontinuous Galerkin Methods

TL;DR: The model presented in this paper can be regarded as a preliminary attempt to model the perfusion in the brain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Static and Dynamic Stretching on Corneal Fibroblast Cell

TL;DR: The stretching experiment revealed that cyclic stretching has a greater inhibitory effect on the growth and proliferation of corneal cells than continuous stretching, and shows thatcyclic loading is more harmful than high intraocular pressure (static loading) to cornea cells.
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Quantification of hypoxic regions distant from occlusions in cerebral penetrating arteriole trees

TL;DR: Hypoxic regions can form distally from the occlusion site, which agrees with the previous observations in the rat brain and indicates the applicability of in silico models to study the effects of microemboli on the brain tissue.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Randomized Trial of Intraarterial Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke

TL;DR: In patients with acute ischemic stroke caused by a proximal intracranial occlusion of the anterior circulation, intraarterial treatment administered within 6 hours after stroke onset was effective and safe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interobserver agreement for the assessment of handicap in stroke patients.

TL;DR: The results confirm the value of the modified Rankin scale in the assessment of handicap in stroke patients; nevertheless, further improvements are possible.
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