Governing equations of tissue modelling and remodelling: A unified generalised description of surface and bulk balance
Pascal R. Buenzli

TL;DR
This paper develops unified continuum equations to model the complex, patchy evolution of biological tissues during growth and remodelling, accounting for surface and bulk processes without tracking individual events.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized formalism for tissue evolution that incorporates discontinuous surface and bulk balances, applicable to heterogeneous tissues like bone.
Findings
Derived equations for tissue patch evolution and properties.
Applied the formalism to bone tissue, modeling osteocyte and mineral densities.
Analyzed errors of mean-field approximation in tissue remodelling.
Abstract
Several biological tissues undergo changes in their geometry and in their bulk material properties by modelling and remodelling processes. Modelling synthesises tissue in some regions and removes tissue in others. Remodelling overwrites old tissue material properties with newly formed, immature tissue properties. As a result, tissues are made up of different "patches", i.e., adjacent tissue regions of different ages and different material properties, within evolving boundaries. In this paper, generalised equations governing the spatio-temporal evolution of such tissues are developed within the continuum model. These equations take into account nonconservative, discontinuous surface mass balance due to creation and destruction of material at moving interfaces, and bulk balance due to tissue maturation. These equations make it possible to model patchy tissue states and their evolution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical Biology Tumor Growth · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions · Elasticity and Material Modeling
