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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Computer Aided Angioplasty : Patient-specific arterial modeling and smooth 3D contact analysis of the stent-balloon-artery interaction

Kiousis, Dimitrios January 2006 (has links)
<p>Paper A: In this paper, the development and implementation of a contact algorithm based on C2-continuous surface representations is discussed. In 3D contact simulations involving models with arbitrarily curved surfaces (as in the case of vessel walls), the discretization of the contact surfaces by means of facet-based techniques could lead to numerical instabilities and finally loss of quadratic convergence. These instabilities arise mainly due to the sliding of contractor (slave) nodes over the boundaries of target (master) contact facets, where jumps of the normal vector are experienced. The paper addresses successfully this problem, by discretization of the target surfaces by means of C2-continuous parameterization schemes. Initially, the uniform cubic B-spline surfaces are introduced. Next, in an attempt for more accurate representations of the geometric models of the contact surfaces, a new parameterization based on the expression of cubic B-splines is developed. The two approaches are implemented into a finite element framework and more specifically, into the multipurpose finite element analysis program FEAP. The special merits of the developed algorithms and the advantages of the smooth surfaces over facet-based approaches are exhibited through a classical contact mechanics problem, considering incompressibility, finite deformations and large slidings. Next, a simulation of balloon angioplasty with stenting is presented, where the contact between both medical devices (balloon and stent) with the arterial wall is modeled. The arterial wall is modeled in this first approach, as hyperelastic, homogeneous, isotropic, while a cylindrically orthotropic model is developed to capture the nonlinear, anisotropic behavior of the balloon catheter under pressure. Two stents with the same geometry but different strut thickness, are studied. Both are considered elasto-plastic. The performed simulations point out the outcome of the balloon angioplasty and stenting in terms of luminal gain and mechanical strains. Finally, a comparison between the two stent configurations is presented.</p><p>Paper B: The second paper makes use of the contact tool developed in Paper A and focuses on the changes of the mechanical environment of the arterial wall due to stenting, as a function of a set of stent design parameters. In particular, Paper B presents a detailed geometric and material model of a postmortem human iliac artery, composed by distinct tissue components, each associated with specific mechanical properties. The constitutive formulation for the artery considers anisotropic, highly nonlinear mechanical characteristics under supraphysiological loadings. The material and structural parameters of the arterial model are obtained through uniaxial tensile tests on stripes extracted from the several arterial tissues that form the stenosis, axially and circumferentially oriented. Through cooperation with a well-established stent manufacturing company, an iliac stent was acquired. The dimensions of the stent are measured under a reflected-light microscope, while it is parameterized in such a way as to enable new designs to be simply generated through variations of its geometric parameters. The 3D balloon-stent-artery interaction is simulated by making use of the smooth contact surfaces with C2-continuity, as previously mentioned. Next, scalar quantities attempt to characterize the arterial wall changes after stenting, in form of contact forces induced by the stent struts, stresses within the individual components and luminal change. These numerically derived quantities allow the determination of the most appropriate stent configuration for an individual stenosis. Therefore, the proposed methodology has the potential to provide a scientific basis for optimizing treatment procedures, stent material and geometries on a patient-specific level.</p>
2

Computer Aided Angioplasty : Patient-specific arterial modeling and smooth 3D contact analysis of the stent-balloon-artery interaction

Kiousis, Dimitrios January 2006 (has links)
Paper A: In this paper, the development and implementation of a contact algorithm based on C2-continuous surface representations is discussed. In 3D contact simulations involving models with arbitrarily curved surfaces (as in the case of vessel walls), the discretization of the contact surfaces by means of facet-based techniques could lead to numerical instabilities and finally loss of quadratic convergence. These instabilities arise mainly due to the sliding of contractor (slave) nodes over the boundaries of target (master) contact facets, where jumps of the normal vector are experienced. The paper addresses successfully this problem, by discretization of the target surfaces by means of C2-continuous parameterization schemes. Initially, the uniform cubic B-spline surfaces are introduced. Next, in an attempt for more accurate representations of the geometric models of the contact surfaces, a new parameterization based on the expression of cubic B-splines is developed. The two approaches are implemented into a finite element framework and more specifically, into the multipurpose finite element analysis program FEAP. The special merits of the developed algorithms and the advantages of the smooth surfaces over facet-based approaches are exhibited through a classical contact mechanics problem, considering incompressibility, finite deformations and large slidings. Next, a simulation of balloon angioplasty with stenting is presented, where the contact between both medical devices (balloon and stent) with the arterial wall is modeled. The arterial wall is modeled in this first approach, as hyperelastic, homogeneous, isotropic, while a cylindrically orthotropic model is developed to capture the nonlinear, anisotropic behavior of the balloon catheter under pressure. Two stents with the same geometry but different strut thickness, are studied. Both are considered elasto-plastic. The performed simulations point out the outcome of the balloon angioplasty and stenting in terms of luminal gain and mechanical strains. Finally, a comparison between the two stent configurations is presented. Paper B: The second paper makes use of the contact tool developed in Paper A and focuses on the changes of the mechanical environment of the arterial wall due to stenting, as a function of a set of stent design parameters. In particular, Paper B presents a detailed geometric and material model of a postmortem human iliac artery, composed by distinct tissue components, each associated with specific mechanical properties. The constitutive formulation for the artery considers anisotropic, highly nonlinear mechanical characteristics under supraphysiological loadings. The material and structural parameters of the arterial model are obtained through uniaxial tensile tests on stripes extracted from the several arterial tissues that form the stenosis, axially and circumferentially oriented. Through cooperation with a well-established stent manufacturing company, an iliac stent was acquired. The dimensions of the stent are measured under a reflected-light microscope, while it is parameterized in such a way as to enable new designs to be simply generated through variations of its geometric parameters. The 3D balloon-stent-artery interaction is simulated by making use of the smooth contact surfaces with C2-continuity, as previously mentioned. Next, scalar quantities attempt to characterize the arterial wall changes after stenting, in form of contact forces induced by the stent struts, stresses within the individual components and luminal change. These numerically derived quantities allow the determination of the most appropriate stent configuration for an individual stenosis. Therefore, the proposed methodology has the potential to provide a scientific basis for optimizing treatment procedures, stent material and geometries on a patient-specific level. / <p>QC 20101118</p>

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