Abstract

Urinary incontinence can be surgically treated by means of artificial sphincters, based on a cuff that provides a pressure around the urethra to occlude the lumen. Considering the frequent access of elderly patients to this surgical practice, tissue degradation phenomena must be investigated, since they could affect treatment reliability and durability. The potential degradation can be interpreted considering a variation within soft tissue constitutive formulation, by means of a correlation between mechanical properties and tissues ageing. The overall compressibility varies, as characteristics aspect of soft tissue mechanical response with age, as well as the stiffness. The investigation is performed by means of a three dimensional numerical model of the urethral duct. The effects of the interaction phenomenon with a cuff is interpreted considering the changes, within the constitutive models, of the basic parameters that define the potential degradation process. The deformation related to compressibility is recalled, ranging between ten and fifty percent in dependence on the degradation level considered. This parameter, reported mostly as representative of the aging effect, shows a large variation that confirms the relevance of the investigation performed toward a sensitivity of the mechanical response of the urethral duct referred to the lumen occlusion.

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