TY - JOUR
T1 - A preliminary study of fast virtual stent-graft deployment
T2 - Application to stanford type b aortic dissection
AU - Chen, Duanduan
AU - Müller-Eschner, Matthias
AU - Rengier, Fabian
AU - Kotelis, Drosos
AU - Böckler, Dittmar
AU - Ventikos, Yiannis
AU - Xu, Yong
AU - Zeng, Yanjun
AU - Peng, Yuhua
AU - Von Tengg-Kobligk, Hendrik
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Aortic dissection is the result of blood intruding into the layers of the aortic wall creating a duplicate channel along the aortic course. This considerably changes aortic morphology and thereby alters blood flow, inducing severe pathological conditions. Endovascular stent-graft placement has become an accepted treatment option for complicated Stanford type B aortic dissection. Stent-graft deployment aims to cover the primary entry, preventing most of the inflow to the false lumen, thereby promoting false lumen thrombosis and true lumen expansion. In recent years the application of this treatment has increased continuously. However, a fast and reasonable prediction for the released stent-graft and the resulting aortic remodelling prior to intervention is still lacking. In this paper, we propose a preliminary study on the fast virtual stent-graft deployment algorithm based on contact mechanics, spring analogy and deformable meshes. By virtually releasing a stent-graft in a patient-specific model of an aortic dissection type Stanford B, we simulate the interaction between the expanding stent-graft and the vessel wall (with low computational cost), and estimate the post-interventional configuration of the true lumen. This preliminary study can be finished within minutes and the results present good consistency with the post-interventional computed tomography angiography. It therefore confirms the feasibility and rationality of this algorithm, encouraging further research on this topic, which may provide more accurate results and could assist in medical decision-making.
AB - Aortic dissection is the result of blood intruding into the layers of the aortic wall creating a duplicate channel along the aortic course. This considerably changes aortic morphology and thereby alters blood flow, inducing severe pathological conditions. Endovascular stent-graft placement has become an accepted treatment option for complicated Stanford type B aortic dissection. Stent-graft deployment aims to cover the primary entry, preventing most of the inflow to the false lumen, thereby promoting false lumen thrombosis and true lumen expansion. In recent years the application of this treatment has increased continuously. However, a fast and reasonable prediction for the released stent-graft and the resulting aortic remodelling prior to intervention is still lacking. In this paper, we propose a preliminary study on the fast virtual stent-graft deployment algorithm based on contact mechanics, spring analogy and deformable meshes. By virtually releasing a stent-graft in a patient-specific model of an aortic dissection type Stanford B, we simulate the interaction between the expanding stent-graft and the vessel wall (with low computational cost), and estimate the post-interventional configuration of the true lumen. This preliminary study can be finished within minutes and the results present good consistency with the post-interventional computed tomography angiography. It therefore confirms the feasibility and rationality of this algorithm, encouraging further research on this topic, which may provide more accurate results and could assist in medical decision-making.
KW - Aortic dissection
KW - Contact mechanics
KW - Deformable meshes
KW - Spring analogy
KW - Stent-graft
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84878383150&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5772/55269
DO - 10.5772/55269
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84878383150
SN - 1729-8806
VL - 10
JO - International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
JF - International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
M1 - 154
ER -