Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5020438 | Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials | 2017 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
Understanding the constitutive behavior of the human brain is critical to interpret the physical environment during neurodevelopment, neurosurgery, and neurodegeneration. A wide variety of constitutive models has been proposed to characterize the brain at different temporal and spatial scales. Yet, their model parameters are typically calibrated with a single loading mode and fail to predict the behavior under arbitrary loading conditions. Here we used a finite viscoelastic Ogden model with six material parameters-an elastic stiffness, two viscoelastic stiffnesses, a nonlinearity parameter, and two viscous time constants-to model the characteristic nonlinearity, conditioning, hysteresis and tension-compression asymmetry of the human brain. We calibrated the model under shear, shear relaxation, compression, compression relaxation, and tension for four different regions of the human brain, the cortex, basal ganglia, corona radiata, and corpus callosum. Strikingly, unconditioned gray matter with 0.36Â kPa and white matter with 0.35Â kPa were equally stiff, whereas conditioned gray matter with 0.52Â kPa was three times stiffer than white matter with 0.18Â kPa. While both unconditioned viscous time constants were larger in gray than in white matter, both conditioned constants were smaller. These rheological differences suggest a different porosity between both tissues and explain-at least in part-the ongoing controversy between reported stiffness differences in gray and white matter. Our unconditioned and conditioned parameter sets are readily available for finite element simulations with commercial software packages that feature Ogden type models at finite deformations. As such, our results have direct implications on improving the accuracy of human brain simulations in health and disease.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Biomedical Engineering
Authors
S. Budday, G. Sommer, G.A. Holzapfel, P. Steinmann, E. Kuhl,