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Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843-3120 U.S.A.

Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

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Page 1: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Continuum Biomechanics of SoftTissue: Successes and Challenges

J. D. Humphrey

Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute

Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843-3120 U.S.A.

Page 2: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Biomechanics - A Long History of Past Successes

Leonardo (1452-1519)

Galileo (1564-1642)

W. Harvey (1578-1657)

R. Descartes (1596-1650)

G. Borelli (1608-1679)

L. Euler (1707-1783)

… and many others

Page 3: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Biomechanics comes of age ~ 1965

• Renaissance in continuum mechanics (1948-1965)

• Structural biology (1951, 1954)

• Digital computer (late 1950s - mid 1960s)

• Finite element methods (1956)

• Space race (1957-1969)

Note: L. Pauling (1995) attributes the birth of modern biology to the methods of theoretical physics / mathematics

Page 4: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Constitutive Relations - The Key to Success

“we see that the greatest need lies in the direction of collecting data in multiaxial loading conditions and formulating a theory for the general rheological behavior of living tissues when stresses and strains vary with time in an arbitrary manner.”

Y.C. Fung (1973)

Page 5: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

An Example - Vascular Mechanics

Page 6: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Early Stress Analyses (~1979)

Page 7: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Importance of Residual Stress (~1986)

Page 8: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Importance of Smooth Muscle (~1999)

Page 9: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

From Complexity Comes Simplicity

• Nonlinear Material Properties and Large Strain

• Anisotropy (circumferential muscle, axial collagen)

• Residual Stresses

• Smooth Muscle Activation

• Heterogeneity (functionally graded)

Question – what optimization rules govern the development and adaptation of vessels?

Page 10: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Future Challenges & Promises

“There are however innumerable other local motions which on account of the minuteness of the moving particles cannot be detected, such as the motions of the particles in hot bodies, fermenting bodies, in putrescent bodies, growing bodies, in the organs of sensation and so forth. If any one shall have the good fortune to discover all these, I might almost say that he will have laid bare the whole nature of bodies so far as the mechanical causes of things are concerned.”

Sir I. Newton (1642-1727)

Page 11: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

ECM

SynthesisCytokines

MMP’s

TIMP’s

Cell

Traction Receptor

Binding

Constitutiv

e

Relations

Cell

Cycle

Cross-linking

GrowthFactors

Integrin

s

MechanicalLoads

Balance

Relations

Cell

Migration

Modeling in Mechanobiology

Page 12: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Adventitia

Media

Intima

SmoothMuscle Cells

Fibroblasts

Collagen

EndothelialCells

ElasticLamina

LayeringSMC

Elastin

Collagen

EC

BL

RecruitedSMC

EC

BL

DEVELOPMENT

MATURITY

Figure G&R1

Page 13: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Developmental Biomechanics

“Here and elsewhere we shall not obtain the best insights into things until we actually see them growing from the beginning” Aristotle (384-322 B.C.)

“without the aid of mechanicians, and others skilled in simulation and modelling, developmental biology will remain a prisoner of our inadequate and conflicting physical intuitions and methaphors.” A.K Harris (1994)

See: LA Taber (1995) Appl Mech Rev 48:487-545.

Page 14: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 15: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Growth & Remodeling

Growth - an increase in mass that is achieved locally via an increase in the number (hyperplasia, migration) or size (hypertrophy) of cells and via a synthesis of extracellular matrix that exceeds removal.

Remodeling - a change in structure that is achieved by reorganizing existing constituents (cross-links) or by producing new constituents having a different organization.

Page 16: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Regulators of Vascular G&R

Page 17: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Conceptually - G&R

Page 18: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 19: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Constrained mixture stress-response

Page 20: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Stretches for a constrained mixture

Page 21: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Kinetics of production and removal

Page 22: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 23: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 24: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 25: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 26: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 27: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 28: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Solid-Fluid Coupling - Aneurysms

Page 29: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Linearization – Stability in the Small

Page 30: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Elastodynamics of Aneurysms

Page 31: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Phase Plane – Time Plot

Page 32: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

HyperopiaArterio-venousM alformation

CerebralAneurysms

Parkinson'sDisease

TransmyocardialRevascularization

HepatocellularCarcinoma

Atrial Fibrillation

Coronary ArteryDisease

Benign ProstaticHyperplasia

JointLaxity

SkinLesions

M enorrhagia,Endometriosis

Page 33: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Denaturation of Collagen

Page 34: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Thermomechanical Testing of Collagenous Membranes

Page 35: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Heat-induced Changes in Mechanical Properties

Page 36: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M
Page 37: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

In Summary, the Need…

“The success of reductionist and molecular approaches in modern medical science has led to an explosion of information, but progress in integrating information has lagged… Mathematical models provide a rational approach for integrating this ocean of data, as well as providing deep insight into biological processes.”

1998 BECON Report

Page 38: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

The Promise...

• Molecular & Cellular Biomechanics

• Developmental Biomechanics

• Growth & Remodeling• Injury & Rehab

• Functional Tissue Engineering

• Muscle Mechanics• Solid-Fluid

Interactions• Biothermomechanics

Page 39: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

The Bioengineer’s Bookshelf

• Alberts et al. (2002) Molecular Biology of the Cell. Garland Publishers.

• Fawcett DW (1986) A Textbook of Histology. W.B. Saunders.

• Medical Dictionary (e.g., Dorland’s)

• and a good “system-specific” text on physiology, e.g., Milnor (1990) Cardiovascular Physiology, Oxford.

Page 40: Continuum Biomechanics of Soft Tissue: Successes and Challenges J. D. Humphrey Department of Biomedical Engineering and M.E DeBakey Institute Texas A&M

Acknowledgments

Funding by the NIH, NSF, Texas-ATP, and Whitaker Foundation

References

•Humphrey JD (2002) Cardiovascular Solid Mechanics: Cells, Tissues, and Organs, Springer-Verlag, NY

•Humphrey JD (2003) Continuum biomechanics of soft biological tissues. Proc R Soc Lond A 459: 3-

46•Humphrey JD (2003) Continuum thermomechanics and

the clinical treatment of disease and injury. Appl Mech Rev 56: 231-260.

•Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology http://link.springer.de