Finite Element Analysis for Biomedical Engineering Applications


Book Description

Finite element analysis has been widely applied to study biomedical problems. This book aims to simulate some common medical problems using finite element advanced technologies, which establish a base for medical researchers to conduct further investigations. This book consists of four main parts: (1) bone, (2) soft tissues, (3) joints, and (4) implants. Each part starts with the structure and function of the biology and then follows the corresponding finite element advanced features, such as anisotropic nonlinear material, multidimensional interpolation, XFEM, fiber enhancement, UserHyper, porous media, wear, and crack growth fatigue analysis. The final section presents some specific biomedical problems, such as abdominal aortic aneurysm, intervertebral disc, head impact, knee contact, and SMA cardiovascular stent. All modeling files are attached in the appendixes of the book. This book will be helpful to graduate students and researchers in the biomedical field who engage in simulations of biomedical problems. The book also provides all readers with a better understanding of current advanced finite element technologies. Details finite element modeling of bone, soft tissues, joints, and implants Presents advanced finite element technologies, such as fiber enhancement, porous media, wear, and crack growth fatigue analysis Discusses specific biomedical problems, such as abdominal aortic aneurysm, intervertebral disc, head impact, knee contact, and SMA cardiovascular stent Explains principles for modeling biology Provides various descriptive modeling files




Finite Element Modeling of Soft Tissue Deformation


Book Description

Computer-aided minimally invasive surgery (MIS) has progressed significantly in the last decade and it has great potential in surgical planning and operations. To limit the damage to nearby healthy tissue, accurate modeling is required of the mechanical behavior of a target soft tissue subject to surgical manipulations. Therefore, the study of soft tissue deformations is important for computer-aided (MIS) in surgical planning and operation, or in developing surgical simulation tools or systems. The image acquisition facilities are also important for prediction accuracy. This dissertation addresses partial differential and integral equations (PDIE) based biomechanical modeling of soft tissue deformations incorporating the specific material properties to characterize the soft tissue responses for certain human interface behaviors. To achieve accurate simulation of real tissue deformations, several biomechanical finite element (FE) models are proposed to characterize liver tissue. The contribution of this work is in theoretical and practical aspects of tissue modeling. High resolution imaging techniques of Micro Computed Tomography (Micro-CT) and Cone Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT) imaging are first proposed to study soft tissue deformation in this dissertation. These high resolution imaging techniques can detect the tissue deformation details in the contact region between the tissue and the probe for small force loads which would be applied to a surgical probe used. Traditional imaging techniques in clinics can only achieve low image resolutions. Very small force loads seen in these procedures can only yield tissue deformation on the few millimeters to sub-millimeter scale. Small variations are hardly to detect. Furthermore, if a model is validated using high resolution images, it implies that the model is true in using the same model for low resolution imaging facilities. The reverse cannot be true since the small variations at the sub-millimeter level cannot be detected. In this dissertation, liver tissue deformations, surface morphological changes, and volume variations are explored and compared from simulations and experiments. The contributions of the dissertation are as follows. For liver tissue, for small force loads (5 grams to tens of grams), the linear elastic model and the neo-Hooke's hyperelastic model are applied and shown to yield some discrepancies among them in simulations and discrepancies between simulations and experiments. The proposed finite element models are verified for liver tissue. A general FE modeling validation system is proposed to verify the applicability of FE models to the soft tissue deformation study. The validation of some FE models is performed visually and quantitatively in several ways in comparison with the actual experimental results. Comparisons among these models are also performed to show their advantages and disadvantages. The method or verification system can be applied for other soft tissues for the finite element analysis of the soft tissue deformation. For brain tissue, an elasticity based model was proposed previously employing local elasticity and Poisson's ratio. It is validated by intraoperative images to show more accurate prediction of brain deformation than the linear elastic model. FE analysis of brain ventricle shape changes was also performed to capture the dynamic variation of the ventricles in author's other works. There, for the safety reasons, the images for brain deformation modeling were from Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scanning which have been used for brain scanning. The measurement process of material properties involves the tissue desiccation, machine limits, human operation errors, and time factors. The acquired material parameters from measurement devices may have some difference from the tissue used in real state of experiments. Therefore, an experimental and simulation based method to inversely evaluate the material parameters is proposed and compared with the material parameters measured by devices. As known, the finite element method (FEM) is a comprehensive and accurate method used to solve the PDIE characterizing the soft tissue deformation in the three dimensional tissue domain, but the computational task is very large in implementation. To achieve near real time simulation and still a close solution of soft tissue deformation, region-of-interest (ROI) based sub-modeling is proposed and the accuracy of the simulated deformations are explored over concentric regions of interest. Such a ROI based FE modeling is compared to the FE modeling over the whole tissue and its efficiency is shown and as well as its influence in practical applications such as endoscopic surgical simulation.










Advances in Biomechanics and Tissue Regeneration


Book Description

Advances in Biomechanics and Tissue Regeneration covers a wide range of recent development and advances in the fields of biomechanics and tissue regeneration. It includes computational simulation, soft tissues, microfluidics, the cardiovascular system, experimental methods in biomechanics, mechanobiology and tissue regeneration. The state-of-the-art, theories and application are presented, making this book ideal for anyone who is deciding which direction to take their future research in this field. In addition, it is ideal for everyone who is exploring new fields or currently working on an interdisciplinary project in tissue biomechanics. Combines new trends in biomechanical modelling and tissue regeneration Offers a broad scope, covering the entire field of tissue biomechanics Contains perspectives from engineering, medicine and biology, thus giving a holistic view of the field




MR Validation of Soft Tissue Deformation as Modeled by Nonlinear Finite Element Analysis


Book Description

Finite element analysis (FEA) can potentially be used to predict soft tissue motion for the purpose of elasticity reconstruction and data fusion applications. For a simple phantom that simulated a soft tissue, FEA accurately predicted motion for surface deformations on the order of 11%. A computer controlled Magnetic Resonance (MR) compatible compression apparatus provided precise, time varying compression to a phantom. The motion of the phantom was measured with MR by acquiring velocity images throughout the cycle of compression. The phantom geometry was modeled with a finite element mesh and the mechanical properties of the phantom material were measured and incorporated in the finite element model. A static deformation was applied to the finite element model of the phantom and the internal motion was calculated. The motion as calculated by the finite element analysis was compared to the motion measured with MR and there was good agreement.







Advances on Modeling in Tissue Engineering


Book Description

This book presents a collection of chapters describing the state of the art on computational modelling and fabrication in tissue engineering. Tissue Engineering is a multidisciplinary field involving scientists from different fields. The development of mathematical methods is quite relevant to understand cell biology and human tissues as well to model, design and fabricate optimized and smart scaffolds. The chapter authors are the distinguished keynote speakers at the first Eccomas thematic conference on Tissue Engineering where the emphasis was on mathematical and computational modeling for scaffold design and fabrication. This particular area of tissue engineering, whose goal is to obtain substitutes for hard tissues such as bone and cartilage, is growing in importance.




Biomechanical Models for Soft Tissue Simulation


Book Description

An overview of biomechanical modeling of human soft tissue using nonlinear theoretical mechanics and incremental finite element methods, useful for computer simulation of the human musculoskeletal system.