Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161387
Title: A comparative study of biomechanical and geometrical attributes of abdominal aortic aneurysms in the Asian and Caucasian populations
Authors: Canchi, Tejas
Patnaik, Sourav S.
Nguyen, Hong N.
Ng, Eddie Yin Kwee
Narayanan, Sriram
Muluk, Satish C.
De Oliveira, Victor
Finol, Ender A.
Keywords: Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Issue Date: 2020
Source: Canchi, T., Patnaik, S. S., Nguyen, H. N., Ng, E. Y. K., Narayanan, S., Muluk, S. C., De Oliveira, V. & Finol, E. A. (2020). A comparative study of biomechanical and geometrical attributes of abdominal aortic aneurysms in the Asian and Caucasian populations. Journal of Biomechanical Engineering, 142(6), 061003-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.4045268
Journal: Journal of Biomechanical Engineering
Abstract: In this work, we provide a quantitative assessment of the biomechanical and geometric features that characterize abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) models generated from 19 Asian and 19 Caucasian diameter-matched AAA patients. 3D patient-specific finite element models were generated and used to compute peak wall stress (PWS), 99th percentile wall stress (99th WS), and spatially averaged wall stress (AWS) for each AAA. In addition, 51 global geometric indices were calculated, which quantify the wall thickness, shape, and curvature of each AAA. The indices were correlated with 99th WS (the only biomechanical metric that exhibited significant association with geometric indices) using Spearman's correlation and subsequently with multivariate linear regression using backward elimination. For the Asian AAA group, 99th WS was highly correlated (R2 = 0.77) with three geometric indices, namely tortuosity, intraluminal thrombus volume, and area-averaged Gaussian curvature. Similarly, 99th WS in the Caucasian AAA group was highly correlated (R2 = 0.87) with six geometric indices, namely maximum AAA diameter, distal neck diameter, diameter-height ratio, minimum wall thickness variance, mode of the wall thickness variance, and area-averaged Gaussian curvature. Significant differences were found between the two groups for ten geometric indices; however, no differences were found for any of their respective biomechanical attributes. Assuming maximum AAA diameter as the most predictive metric for wall stress was found to be imprecise: 24% and 28% accuracy for the Asian and Caucasian groups, respectively. This investigation reveals that geometric indices other than maximum AAA diameter can serve as predictors of wall stress, and potentially for assessment of aneurysm rupture risk, in the Asian and Caucasian AAA populations.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161387
ISSN: 0148-0731
DOI: 10.1115/1.4045268
Schools: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 
Rights: © 2020 ASME. All rights reserved.
Fulltext Permission: none
Fulltext Availability: No Fulltext
Appears in Collections:MAE Journal Articles

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