A fully resolved active musculo-mechanical model for esophageal transport
Wenjun Kou, Amneet Pal Singh Bhalla, Boyce E. Griffith, John E., Pandolfino, Peter J. Kahrilas, Neelesh A. Patankar

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive computational model of esophageal transport that integrates bolus dynamics, multi-layered esophageal structure, and muscle activation, providing new insights into esophageal function and potential clinical applications.
Contribution
It introduces the first fully integrated simulation of bolus, esophageal layers, and muscle activation using an immersed boundary approach, advancing understanding of esophageal mechanics.
Findings
Simulations replicate pressure peaks observed experimentally.
Model captures the role of mucosal layers in bolus transport.
Provides detailed pressure and kinematic data for clinical correlation.
Abstract
Esophageal transport is a physiological process that mechanically transports an ingested food bolus from the pharynx to the stomach via the esophagus, a multi-layered muscular tube. This process involves interactions between the bolus, the esophagus, and the neurally coordinated activation of the esophageal muscles. In this work, we use an immersed boundary (IB) approach to simulate peristaltic transport in the esophagus. The bolus is treated as a viscous fluid that is actively transported by the muscular esophagus, which is modeled as an actively contracting, fiber-reinforced tube. A simplified version of our model is verified by comparison to an analytic solution to the tube dilation problem. Three different complex models of the multi-layered esophagus, which differ in their activation patterns and the layouts of the mucosal layers, are then extensively tested. To our knowledge,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
