Hyper-viscoelastic 3D response of axons subjected to repeated tensile loads in brain white matter
Mohit Agarwal, Assimina A. Pelegri

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel finite element model combining hyperelastic and viscoelastic properties to analyze axonal response under repeated tensile loads, revealing stress relaxation and damage accumulation in brain white matter.
Contribution
A hybrid hyper-viscoelastic FEM model incorporating oligodendrocyte-axon tethering is developed to study repeated tensile loading effects on axons.
Findings
Axons exhibit stress relaxation under repetitive stretch.
Gradual axonal softening occurs with repeated loads.
Undulated axons are more susceptible to damage.
Abstract
A novel finite element method (FEM) is developed to study mechanical response of axons embedded in extra cellular matrix (ECM) when subjected to harmonic uniaxial stretch under purely non-affine kinematic boundary conditions. The proposed modeling approach combines hyper-elastic (such as Ogden model) and time/frequency domain viscoelastic constitutive models to evaluate the effect of parametrically varying oligodendrocyte-axon tethering under harmonic stretch at 50Hz. A hybrid hyper-viscoelastic material (HVE) model enabled the analysis of repeated uniaxial load on stress propagation and damage accumulation in white matter. In the proposed FEM, oligodendrocyte connections to axons are depicted via a spring-dashpot model. This tethering technique facilitates contact definition at various locations, parameterizes connection points and varies stiffness of connection hubs. Results from a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElasticity and Material Modeling · Automotive and Human Injury Biomechanics · Cellular and Composite Structures
