Abstract

Atherosclerosis is a prevalent cause of acute coronary syndromes that consists of lipid deposition inside the artery wall, creating an atherosclerotic plaque. Early detection may prevent the risk of plaque rupture. Nowadays, intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is the most common medical imaging technology for atherosclerotic plaque detection. It provides an image of the section of the coronary wall and, in combination with new techniques, can estimate the displacement or strain fields. From these magnitudes and by inverse analysis, it is possible to estimate the mechanical properties of the plaque tissues and their stress distribution. In this paper, we presented a methodology based on two approaches to characterize the mechanical properties of atherosclerotic tissues. The first approach estimated the linear behavior under particular pressure. In contrast, the second technique yielded the non-linear hyperelastic material curves for the fibrotic tissues across the complete physiological pressure range. To establish and validate this method, the theoretical framework employed in silico models to simulate atherosclerotic plaques and their IVUS data. We analyzed different materials and real geometries with finite element (FE) models. After the segmentation of the fibrotic, calcification, and lipid tissues, an inverse FE analysis was performed to estimate the mechanical response of the tissues. Both approaches employed an optimization process to obtain the mechanical properties by minimizing the error between the radial strains obtained from the simulated IVUS and those achieved in each iteration. The second methodology was successfully applied to five distinct real geometries and four different fibrotic tissues, getting median R 2 of 0.97 and 0.92, respectively, when comparing the real and estimated behavior curves. In addition, the last technique reduced errors in the estimated plaque strain field by more than 20% during the optimization process, compared to the former approach. The findings enabled the estimation of the stress field over the hyperelastic plaque tissues, providing valuable insights into its risk of rupture.

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