Biomechanical analysis of fluid percussion model of brain injury.

Haojie Mao, Lihong Lu, Kewei Bian, Fredrik Clausen, Niall Colgan, Michael Gilchrist
Author Information
  1. Haojie Mao: Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Western University, London, ON N6A 5B9, Canada. Electronic address: hmao8@uwo.ca.
  2. Lihong Lu: Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Western University, London, ON N6A 5B9, Canada.
  3. Kewei Bian: Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Western University, London, ON N6A 5B9, Canada.
  4. Fredrik Clausen: Department of Neuroscience, Neurosurgery, Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden.
  5. Niall Colgan: School of Physics, NUI Galway, Galway, Ireland.
  6. Michael Gilchrist: School of Electrical, Electronic & Mechanical Engineering, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin, Ireland.

Abstract

Fluid percussion injury (FPI) is a widely used experimental model for studying traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, little is known about how the brain mechanically responds to fluid impacts and how the mechanical pressures/strains of the brain correlate to subsequent brain damage for rodents during FPI. Hence, we developed a numerical approach to simulate FPI experiments on rats and characterize rat brain pressure/strain responses at a high resolution. A previous rat brain model was improved with a new hexahedral elements-based skull model and a new cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) layer. We validated the numerical model against experimentally measured pressures from FPI. Our results indicated that brain tissues under FPI experienced high pressures, which were slightly lower (10-20%) than input saline pressure. Interestingly, FPI was a mixed focus- and diffuse-type injury model with highest strains (12%) being concentrated in the ipsilateral cortex under the fluid-impact site and diffuse strains (5-10%) being spread to the entire brain, which was different from controlled cortical impact in which high strains decreased gradually away from the impact site.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Animals
Biomechanical Phenomena
Brain Injuries, Traumatic
Disease Models, Animal
Mechanical Phenomena
Pressure
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Stress, Mechanical

Word Cloud

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