Multiscale mechanical model based on patient-specific geometry: application to early keratoconus development
Chlo\'e Giraudet, J\'erome Diaz, Patrick Le Tallec, Jean-Marc Allain

TL;DR
This study develops a multiscale, patient-specific mechanical model of the cornea to investigate early keratoconus, revealing that mechanical weakening of collagen lamellae, rather than geometric changes, primarily drives disease development.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel multiscale, patient-specific corneal model incorporating collagen lamellae mechanics to distinguish mechanical versus geometric factors in keratoconus.
Findings
Mechanical weakening of lamellae reproduces early keratoconus features.
Unfolding stretch parameter critically influences corneal deformation.
Geometry alone does not account for observed keratoconus changes.
Abstract
Keratoconus is a pathology of the cornea associated with a tissue thinning and a weakening of its mechanical properties. However, it remains elusive which aspect is the leading cause of the disease. To investigate this question, we combined a multiscale model with a patient-geometry in order to simulate the mechanical response of healthy and pathological corneas under intraocular pressure. The constitutive behavior of the cornea is described through an energy function which takes into account the isotropic matrix of the cornea, the geometric structure of collagen lamellae and the quasi-incompressibility of the tissue. A micro-sphere description is implemented to take into account the typical features of the collagen lamellae as obtained experimentally, namely their orientation, their stiffness and their dispersion, as well as the their unfolding stretch, at which they start to provide a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCorneal surgery and disorders · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions · Elasticity and Material Modeling
