The importance of myocardial perfusion at the outset of cardiac disease remains largely understudied. To address this topic we present a mathematical model that considers the systemic circulation, the coronary vessels, the myocardium, and the interactions among these components. The core of the whole model is the description of the myocardium as a multicompartment poromechanics system. A novel decomposition of the poroelastic Helmholtz potential involved in the poromechanics model allows for a quasi-incompressible model that adequately describes the physical interaction among all components in the porous medium. We further provide a rigorous mathematical analysis that gives guidelines for the choice of the Helmholtz potential. To reduce th...
Mathematical modeling of the human heart and its function can expand our understanding of various ca...
The mechanisms by which cardiac mechanics effect coronary perfusion (cardiac-to-coronary coupling) r...
The axisymmetric model describes myocardial tissue as a spongy saturated anisotropic viscoelastic ma...
The importance of myocardial perfusion at the outset of cardiac disease remains largely understudied...
AbstractThe strong coupling between the flow in coronary vessels and the mechanical deformation of t...
The strong coupling between the flow in coronary vessels and the mechanical deformation of the myoca...
Modern approaches to modelling cardiac perfusion now commonly describe the myocardium using the fram...
International audienceIn this paper, we adapt a previously developed poromechanical formulation to m...
Abstract The aim of this paper is to introduce a new mathematical model that simulates myocardial bl...
National audienceSee http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/59/26/88/ANNEX/r_5H9QH1SR.pd
Associate Editor Michael R. King oversaw the review of this article. Abstract—Coronary flow is gover...
Mathematical modelling of the human heart and its function can expand our understanding of various c...
Mathematical modeling of the human heart and its function can expand our understanding of various ca...
The mechanisms by which cardiac mechanics effect coronary perfusion (cardiac-to-coronary coupling) r...
The axisymmetric model describes myocardial tissue as a spongy saturated anisotropic viscoelastic ma...
The importance of myocardial perfusion at the outset of cardiac disease remains largely understudied...
AbstractThe strong coupling between the flow in coronary vessels and the mechanical deformation of t...
The strong coupling between the flow in coronary vessels and the mechanical deformation of the myoca...
Modern approaches to modelling cardiac perfusion now commonly describe the myocardium using the fram...
International audienceIn this paper, we adapt a previously developed poromechanical formulation to m...
Abstract The aim of this paper is to introduce a new mathematical model that simulates myocardial bl...
National audienceSee http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/59/26/88/ANNEX/r_5H9QH1SR.pd
Associate Editor Michael R. King oversaw the review of this article. Abstract—Coronary flow is gover...
Mathematical modelling of the human heart and its function can expand our understanding of various c...
Mathematical modeling of the human heart and its function can expand our understanding of various ca...
The mechanisms by which cardiac mechanics effect coronary perfusion (cardiac-to-coronary coupling) r...
The axisymmetric model describes myocardial tissue as a spongy saturated anisotropic viscoelastic ma...