Patient-specific coronary angioplasty simulations -- a mixed-dimensional finite element modeling approach
Janina C. Datz, Ivo Steinbrecher, Christoph Meier, Nora Hagmeyer,, Leif-Christopher Engel, Alexander Popp, Martin R. Pfaller, Heribert, Schunkert, Wolfgang A. Wall

TL;DR
This paper introduces a mixed-dimensional finite element modeling approach for patient-specific coronary angioplasty simulations, enabling realistic and computationally efficient analysis of mechanical stresses that influence restenosis risk.
Contribution
It develops a novel mixed-dimensional formulation combining beam and 3D models for realistic, efficient coronary stenting simulations, advancing mechanistic understanding of restenosis.
Findings
High artery wall stresses occur in severely stenosed areas during intervention.
Stent boundary regions experience elevated mechanical stresses.
The approach lays groundwork for preventing in-stent restenosis.
Abstract
Coronary angioplasty with stent implantation is the most frequently used interventional treatment for coronary artery disease. However, reocclusion within the stent, referred to as in-stent restenosis, occurs in up to 10% of lesions. It is widely accepted that mechanical loads on the vessel wall strongly affect adaptive and maladaptive mechanisms. Yet, the role of procedural and lesion-specific influence on restenosis risk remains understudied. Computational modeling of the stenting procedure can provide new mechanistic insights, such as local stresses, that play a significant role in tissue growth and remodeling. Previous simulation studies often featured simplified artery and stent geometries and cannot be applied to real-world examples. Realistic simulations were computationally expensive since they featured fully resolved stenting device models. The aim of this work is to develop…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElasticity and Material Modeling · Orthopaedic implants and arthroplasty · Coronary Interventions and Diagnostics
