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Effects of Brain Ventricular Shape on Periventricular Biomechanics: A Finite-element Analysis

 

作者: Alonso,   Peña Malcolm,   Bolton Helen,   Whitehouse John D.,  

 

期刊: Neurosurgery  (OVID Available online 1999)
卷期: Volume 45, issue 1  

页码: 107-107

 

ISSN:0148-396X

 

年代: 1999

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: Biomechanics;Finite-element analysis;Hydrocephalus;Periventricular edema

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

OBJECTIVE:A computer simulation based on the finite-element method was used to study the biomechanics of acute obstructive hydrocephalus and, in particular, to define why periventricular edema is most prominent in the anterior and posterior horns.METHODS:Brain parenchyma was modeled as a two-phase material composed of a porous elastic matrix saturated by interstitial fluid. The effects of the cerebrovascular system were not included in this model. The change in the shape of the ventricles as they enlarged was described by two variables, i.e., the stretch of the ependyma and the concavity of the ventricular wall. The distribution of stresses and strains in the tissue was defined by two standard mechanical measures, i.e., the mean effective stress and the void ratio.RESULTS:With obstruction to cerebrospinal fluid flow, the simulation revealed that the degree of ventricular expansion at equilibrium depended on the pressure gradient between the ventricles and the subarachnoid space. Periventricular edema was associated with the appearance of expansive (tensile) stresses in the tissues surrounding the frontal and occipital horns. In contrast, the concave shape in the region of the body of the ventricle created compressive stresses in the parenchyma. Both of these stresses seem to be direct consequences of the concave/convex geometry of the ventricular wall, which serves to selectively focus the forces (perpendicular to the ependyma) produced by the increased intraventricular fluid pressure in the periventricular tissues.CONCLUSION:The distribution of periventricular edema in acute hydrocephalus is a result not only of increased intraventricular pressure but also of ventricular geometry.

 



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