Abstract
A linear incremental finite element model is used to analyze the mechanical behavior of the left ventricle. The ventricle is treated as a heterogeneous, non-linearly elastic, isotropic, thick-walled solid of revolution. A new triaxial constitutive relation for the myocardium is presented which exhibits the observed exponential length-passive tension behavior of left ventricular papillary muscle in the limit of uniaxial tension. This triaxial relation contains three parameters: (a) a "small strain" Young's modulus, (b) a Poisson's ratio, and (c) a parameter which characterizes the nonlinear aspect of the elastic behavior of heart muscle. The inner third and outer two-thirds of the ventricular wall are assumed to have small strain Young's moduli of 30 and 60 g/cm(2), respectively. The Poisson's ratio is assumed to be equal to 0.49 throughout the ventricular wall. In general, the results of this study indicate that while a linearly elastic model for the ventricle may be adequate in terms of predicting pressure-volume relationships, a linear model may have serious limitations with regard to predicting fiber elongation within the ventricular wall. For example, volumes and midwall equatorial circumferential strains predicted by the linear and nonlinear models considered in this study differ by approximately 20 and 90%, respectively, at a transmural pressure of 12 cm H(2)O.
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