The Finite Element Method and Balancing Principle for Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Author(s):  
Larisa Beilina ◽  
Geneviève Guillot ◽  
Kati Niinimäki
2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Johane H. Bracamonte ◽  
John S. Wilson ◽  
Joao S. Soares

Abstract The establishment of in vivo, noninvasive patient-specific, and regionally resolved techniques to quantify aortic properties is key to improving clinical risk assessment and scientific understanding of vascular growth and remodeling. A promising and novel technique to reach this goal is an inverse finite element method (FEM) approach that utilizes magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-derived displacement fields from displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE). Previous studies using DENSE MRI suggested that the infrarenal abdominal aorta (IAA) deforms heterogeneously during the cardiac cycle. We hypothesize that this heterogeneity is driven in healthy aortas by regional adventitial tethering and interaction with perivascular tissues, which can be modeled with elastic foundation boundary conditions (EFBCs) using a collection of radially oriented springs with varying stiffness with circumferential distribution. Nine healthy IAAs were modeled using previously acquired patient-specific imaging and displacement fields from steady-state free procession (SSFP) and DENSE MRI, followed by assessment of aortic wall properties and heterogeneous EFBC parameters using inverse FEM. In contrast to traction-free boundary condition, prescription of EFBC reduced the nodal displacement error by 60% and reproduced the DENSE-derived heterogeneous strain distribution. Estimated aortic wall properties were in reasonable agreement with previously reported experimental biaxial testing data. The distribution of normalized EFBC stiffness was consistent among all patients and spatially correlated to standard peri-aortic anatomical features, suggesting that EFBC could be generalized for human adults with normal anatomy. This approach is computationally inexpensive, making it ideal for clinical research and future incorporation into cardiovascular fluid–structure analyses.


Nanoscale ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (43) ◽  
pp. 20868-20875 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junxiong Guo ◽  
Yu Liu ◽  
Yuan Lin ◽  
Yu Tian ◽  
Jinxing Zhang ◽  
...  

We propose a graphene plasmonic infrared photodetector tuned by ferroelectric domains and investigate the interfacial effect using the finite element method.


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