预测严重弥漫性轴索损伤实验模型损伤的有限元建模方法

Reid T. Miller, S. Margulies, M. Leoni, M. Nonaka, Xiao‐Han Chen, Douglas H. Smith, D. Meaney
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引用次数: 149

摘要

创伤性脑损伤(TBI)有限元(FE)分析已经从粗糙的颅骨和大脑系统的几何表示发展到考虑到不同解剖特征的复杂模型。两种不同的有限元建模方法已经发展到解释脑外伤期间颅骨和大脑皮层之间发生的相对运动。第一种方法假设相对运动可以通过将蛛网膜下腔内的脑脊液表示为低剪切模量,几乎不可压缩的固体来估计。第二种方法假设相对运动可以通过定义大脑皮层和硬脑膜之间的摩擦界面来近似。本研究将TBI实验模型的数据与FE分析相结合,以评估建模方法预测特定形式TBI的能力。轴向面旋转加速导致小型猪长时间的创伤性昏迷,整个白质区域的轴突损伤,以及肉眼可见的出血性皮质挫伤。微型猪的二维有限元分析结果表明,建模方法中考虑颅骨和大脑皮层之间发生的相对运动的方式可以极大地影响分析结果。本研究清楚地表明,在动物实验中,将颅骨与大脑皮层之间的相对运动作为摩擦界面的建模方法最好地预测了最终的损伤模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
FINITE ELEMENT MODELING APPROACHES FOR PREDICTING INJURY IN AN EXPERIMENTAL MODEL OF SEVERE DIFFUSE AXONAL INJURY
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) finite element (FE) analyses have evolved from crude geometric representations of the skull and brain system into sophisticated models which take into account distinct anatomical features. Two distinct FE modeling approaches have evolved to account for the relative motion that occurs between the skull and cerebral cortex during TBI. The first approach assumes that the relative motion can be estimated by representing the cerebrospinal fluid inside the subarachnoid space as a low shear modulus, virtually incompressible solid. The second approach assumes that the relative motion can be approximated by defining a frictional interface between the cerebral cortex and dura mater. This study presents data from an experimental model of TBI coupled with FE analyses to evaluate the modeling approach's ability to predict specific forms of TBI. Axial plane rotational accelerations produced prolonged traumatic coma in the miniature pig, axonal injury throughout regions of the white matter, and macroscopic hemorrhagic cortical contusions. Results from 2-dimensional FE analyses of the miniature pig showed that the manner in which the modeling approach accounts for the relative motions occurring between the skull and cerebral cortex can dramatically influence the outcome of an analysis. This study clearly demonstrated that the modeling approach which represented the relative motion between the skull and cerebral cortex as a frictional interface best predicted the resulting injury pattern in a 5th axial plane animal experiment.
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