In this thesis a coupled model of cardiac electromechanical activity is presented, using the finite element method to model both electrophysiology and mechanics within a deforming domain. The efficiency of the electrical model was improved using adaptive mesh refinement and the mechanical system performance was improved with the addition of preconditioning. Unstructured triangular meshes were used throughout. The electrophysiology model uses the ten Tusscher-Panfilov 2006 detailed cellular model, and includes anisotropic diffusion, uses a semi-implicit time stepping scheme, stores data in an efficient sparse storage format and applies a Reverse Cuthill-McKee ordering algorithm to reduce the matrices’ bandwidths. Linear elements were used to...
Sudden cardiac death following cardiac arrest is a major killer in the industrialised world. The lea...
In this work we present a parallel solver for the numerical simulation of the cardiac electro-mechan...
The main purpose of this dissertation is to develop a population-based cellular model of remodeled e...
In this thesis a coupled model of cardiac electromechanical activity is presented, using the finite ...
Effective numerical modeling of the cardiac electro-mechanics still presents open challenging proble...
Cardiac arrhythmias are a leading cause of death worldwide. Notably, the electrophysiologiy and micr...
We introduce and study some scalable domain decomposition preconditioners for cardiac electro-mechan...
In this project, we develop a Finite Element Method (FEM) formulation that solves the cardiac electr...
AbstractElectromechanical (EM) models of the heart have been used successfully to study fundamental ...
AbstractThe simulation of cardiac electrophysiology requires small time steps and a fine mesh in ord...
International audienceThis paper presents a new three-dimensional electromechanical model of the two...
The heart is a complex organ found in all vertebrates. It circulates blood throughout the body by cy...
In this paper, we present a high performance computational electromechanical model of the heart, cou...
The computational modelling of the heart motion within a cardiac cycle is an extremely challenging p...
We present a fully coupled electromechanical model of the heart. The model integrates cardiac electr...
Sudden cardiac death following cardiac arrest is a major killer in the industrialised world. The lea...
In this work we present a parallel solver for the numerical simulation of the cardiac electro-mechan...
The main purpose of this dissertation is to develop a population-based cellular model of remodeled e...
In this thesis a coupled model of cardiac electromechanical activity is presented, using the finite ...
Effective numerical modeling of the cardiac electro-mechanics still presents open challenging proble...
Cardiac arrhythmias are a leading cause of death worldwide. Notably, the electrophysiologiy and micr...
We introduce and study some scalable domain decomposition preconditioners for cardiac electro-mechan...
In this project, we develop a Finite Element Method (FEM) formulation that solves the cardiac electr...
AbstractElectromechanical (EM) models of the heart have been used successfully to study fundamental ...
AbstractThe simulation of cardiac electrophysiology requires small time steps and a fine mesh in ord...
International audienceThis paper presents a new three-dimensional electromechanical model of the two...
The heart is a complex organ found in all vertebrates. It circulates blood throughout the body by cy...
In this paper, we present a high performance computational electromechanical model of the heart, cou...
The computational modelling of the heart motion within a cardiac cycle is an extremely challenging p...
We present a fully coupled electromechanical model of the heart. The model integrates cardiac electr...
Sudden cardiac death following cardiac arrest is a major killer in the industrialised world. The lea...
In this work we present a parallel solver for the numerical simulation of the cardiac electro-mechan...
The main purpose of this dissertation is to develop a population-based cellular model of remodeled e...