Rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a catastrophic event that leads to high mortality and morbidity in patients. The primary causes associated with aneurysm rupture remain poorly understood despite rigorous investigations. Reports have shown that AAA that went on to rupture or present ruptured had higher peak wall tension (stress resultant) than those that did not go on to rupture or present ruptured. Studies investigating the material strength of ruptured AAA and unruptured AAA revealed that the uniaxial failure strength in ruptured AAA is no different on average than unruptured AAA. However, it is poorly understood whether uniaxial failure properties are reliable as they are not indicative of the manner in which failure occurs in biological soft tissues. Multi-axial failure properties using a bubble inflation test (BIT) have been implemented by various groups but have not been directly compared against uniaxial failure properties. The current study seeks to develop a BIT apparatus, to compare multi-axial and uniaxial failure properties of fibrous anisotropic biological soft tissues (bovine aorta) and non-fibrous isotropic molded silicon, and to perform a survey of computational indices at the rupture sites of four ruptured AAA. Two versions of the BIT apparatus were developed: a manual that was developed allows for a large amount of failure properties to be extracted that can identify localized weaknesses. It was found that circumferentially oriented multi-axial failure was correlated with longitudinally oriented uniaxial failure properties, however, for oblique oriented multi-axial failure the correlation decreased. Utilizing the insights gained from the multi-axial experiments it was determined that the failure properties used in the computational study with the data from Raghavan et al. were appropriate for use in retrospective assessment of the rupture site in four ruptured AAA computational models. Although the study was inconclusive in finding causation, the rupture line of each aneurysm had indices ranging between the third quartile and peak values for tension to failure tension ratio, nodal displacement magnitude, strain energy per unit volume and strain energy per unit surface area. This study provides a framework for interrogating failure properties at a higher density of measurement and a heterogeneous computational model that has the potential to predict AAA rupture in the future.
Study of multi-axial failure properties of planar biological soft tissues
Abstract
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Study of multi-axial failure properties of planar biological soft tissues
- Creators
- Timothy Kwang-Joon Chung - University of Iowa
- Contributors
- Suresh M.L. Raghavan (Advisor)Joseph M. Reinhardt (Committee Member)Nicole M. Grosland (Committee Member)Edward Sander (Committee Member)Shaoping Xiao (Committee Member)
- Resource Type
- Dissertation
- Degree Awarded
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
- Degree in
- Biomedical Engineering
- Date degree season
- Summer 2017
- DOI
- 10.17077/etd.5ecc7t1y
- Publisher
- University of Iowa
- Number of pages
- xx, 158 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2017 Timothy Kwang-Joon Chung
- Language
- English
- Date submitted
- 09/27/2017
- Description illustrations
- color illustrations
- Description bibliographic
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 126-131).
- Public Abstract (ETD)
The cardiovascular system is a vast network of interconnected tubes, there is a tube located behind the stomach known as the abdominal aorta that is a major conduit of oxygenated blood flow to the lower region of the human body. A disease known as aneurysm arises in this region and the abdominal aorta undergoes irreversible ballooning and if left untreated can go on to rupture. Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) rupture is a leading cause of death in westernized cultures and it remains poorly understood on why this occurs. Studies have considered the material strength of aneurysms and the amount of wall stress that the aneurysm wall is subject to in computer simulations with little consensus on what exactly is the root cause of rupture. This current study that is proposed investigates the material properties in all directions (multiaxial) using a bubble inflation test (the previous method to test failure in a single direction, uniaxial) and compare the two using biological soft tissues and manmade molded silicone. It was found that the multiaxial failure properties were correlated to the uniaxial failure properties and this information was utilized in a separate computer simulation of four ruptured AAA. There were no metrics that could predict the rupture site location, but in general stress and strain metrics used showed that the rupture site had elevated values between the 75th and 99th percentile. Further studies using the methods developed in this study may allow researchers to accurate predict rupture site location and provide clinicians with rupture risk assessments using computer simulations.
- Academic Unit
- Roy J. Carver Department of Biomedical Engineering; Craniofacial Anomalies Research Center
- Record Identifier
- 9983777033902771