Compressibility and Anisotropy of the Ventricular Myocardium: Experimental Analysis and Microstructural Modeling

Eoin McEvoy, Gerhard A Holzapfel, Patrick McGarry

Publikation: Beitrag in einer FachzeitschriftArtikelBegutachtung

Abstract

While the anisotropic behavior of the complex composite myocardial tissue has been well characterized in recent years, the compressibility of the tissue has not been rigorously investigated to date. In the first part of this study, we present experimental evidence that passive-excised porcine myocardium exhibits volume change. Under tensile loading of a cylindrical specimen, a volume change of 4.1±1.95% is observed at a peak stretch of 1.3. Confined compression experiments also demonstrate significant volume change in the tissue (loading applied up to a volumetric strain of 10%). In order to simulate the multiaxial passive behavior of the myocardium, a nonlinear volumetric hyperelastic component is combined with the well-established Holzapfel-Ogden anisotropic hyperelastic component for myocardium fibers. This framework is shown to describe the experimentally observed behavior of porcine and human tissues under shear and biaxial loading conditions. In the second part of the study, a representative volumetric element (RVE) of myocardium tissue is constructed to parse the contribution of the tissue vasculature to observed volume change under confined compression loading. Simulations of the myocardium microstructure suggest that the vasculature cannot fully account for the experimentally measured volume change. Additionally, the RVE is subjected to six modes of shear loading to investigate the influence of microscale fiber alignment and dispersion on tissue-scale mechanical behavior.

Originalspracheenglisch
Aufsatznummer081004
FachzeitschriftJournal of Biomechanical Engineering
Jahrgang140
Ausgabenummer8
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 1 Aug. 2018

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