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1.
Med Eng Phys ; 86: 96-108, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33261740

ABSTRACT

In this paper the biomechanical response of a novel dental preparation technique, referred to as the Anatomic-Functional-Geometry treatment (AFG), is investigated through a 3D nonlinear finite-element modelling approach. A comparative investigation against a standard technique employed in dental clinical practice is carried out, by simulating typical experimental mechanical tests and physiological functional conditions. Failure mechanisms of treated tooth models are investigated through a progressive damage formulation implemented via a displacement-driven incremental approach. Computational results clearly show that AFG-treated teeth, as a consequence of a more conservative morphological preparation of the tooth, are characterized by more effective crown-dentin loading transfer mechanisms, higher fracture strength levels and more homogeneous stress patterns than the standard-treated ones, thereby opening towards widespread clinical application.


Subject(s)
Nonlinear Dynamics , Biomechanical Phenomena , Computer Simulation , Dental Stress Analysis , Finite Element Analysis , Humans , Stress, Mechanical
2.
Med Eng Phys ; 47: 25-37, 2017 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28690045

ABSTRACT

A novel fluid-structure computational framework for vascular applications is herein presented. It is developed by combining the double multi-scale nature of vascular physiopathology in terms of both tissue properties and blood flow. Addressing arterial tissues, they are modelled via a nonlinear multiscale constitutive rationale, based only on parameters having a clear histological and biochemical meaning. Moreover, blood flow is described by coupling a three-dimensional fluid domain (undergoing physiological inflow conditions) with a zero-dimensional model, which allows to reproduce the influence of the downstream vasculature, furnishing a realistic description of the outflow proximal pressure. The fluid-structure interaction is managed through an explicit time-marching approach, able to accurately describe tissue nonlinearities within each computational step for the fluid problem. A case study associated to a patient-specific aortic abdominal aneurysmatic geometry is numerically investigated, highlighting advantages gained from the proposed multiscale strategy, as well as showing soundness and effectiveness of the established framework for assessing useful clinical quantities and risk indexes.


Subject(s)
Aorta, Abdominal/pathology , Aorta, Abdominal/physiopathology , Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal/pathology , Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal/physiopathology , Blood Flow Velocity , Models, Cardiovascular , Patient-Specific Modeling , Blood Pressure , Computer Simulation , Humans , Rheology/methods
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