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Journal ArticleDOI

Regional wall mechanics in the ischemic left ventricle: numerical modeling and dog experiments

TLDR
The mechanics of the ischemic left ventricle during a complete cardiac cycle were simulated using a finite-element model accounting for the thick-walled ventricular geometry, the fibrous nature of the myocardial tissue, and the dependency of active muscle fiber stress on time, strain, and strain rate.
Abstract
The mechanics of the ischemic left ventricle during a complete cardiac cycle were simulated using a finite-element model accounting for the thick-walled ventricular geometry, the fibrous nature of the myocardial tissue, and the dependency of active muscle fiber stress on time, strain, and strain rate. Ischemia was modeled by disabling the generation of active stress in a region comprising approximately 12% of total wall volume. In the model simulations, the approximately 12% reduction in the amount of normally contracting tissue resulted in an approximately 25% reduction in stroke work compared with the normal situation. The more-than-proportional loss of stroke work may partly be attributed to storage of elastic energy in the bulging ischemic region. Furthermore the mechanical performance in the nonischemic border zone deteriorated because of reduced systolic fiber stress (if fibers were in series with those in the ischemic region) or reduced fiber shortening (if fibers were parallel). The deformation pattern of the ventricle was asymmetric with respect to the ischemic region because of the anisotropy of the myocardial tissue. Epicardial fiber shortening in and around the ischemic region, as predicted from the model simulations, was in qualitative agreement with shortening, as measured in four dogs in which ischemia was induced by occlusion of the distal part of the left anterior interventricular coronary artery.

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Why SIT Works: Normal Function Despite Typical Myofiber Pattern in Situs Inversus Totalis (SIT) Hearts Derived by Shear-induced Myofiber Reorientation

TL;DR: Pump and myofiber function in SIT and SS LVs are similar, despite essential differences in myocardial structure, and SS and SIT LV structure and function may originate from same processes of adaptive my ofiber reorientation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Model generation interface for simulation of left ventricular motion

TL;DR: An interface is proposed which generates complex left ventricular simulation model which can be generated with 3D shapemodel, cell orientation model, cell electrophysiological model, coronary artery model and tissue mechanical property and model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanics of infarcted left ventricle: a review of modelling.

TL;DR: Substantial attention should be paid to new constitutive laws with respect to stress-stretch curve and strain energy function for infarcted passive myocardium, collagen fibre orientation optimization in scar, cardiac rupture and tissue damage and viscoelastic effect post-MI in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multi-parametric MRI as an indirect evaluation tool of the mechanical properties of in-vitro cardiac tissues

TL;DR: The proposed multi-parametric MRI protocol associated to principal component analysis is a promising tool for the evaluation of mechanical properties within the left ventricle in the in vitro porcine model.

Depolarization wave and mechanics in the paced heart : model and experiment

TL;DR: A submitted manuscript is the author's version of the article upon submission and before peer-review as discussed by the authors, and the final published version features the final layout of the paper including the volume, issue and page numbers.
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