• français
    • English
    français
  • Login
Help
View Item 
  •   Home
  • Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak (IBHGC)
  • View Item
  • Home
  • Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak (IBHGC)
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Quantifying discretization errors for soft tissue simulation in computer assisted surgery: A preliminary study

Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
Author
DUPREZ, Michel
542019 Laboratoire Jacques-Louis Lions [LJLL (UMR_7598)]
BORDAS, Stéphane Pierre Alain
97637 Faculté des Sciences, de la Technologie et de la Communication [FSTC]
BUCKI, Marek
BUI, Huu Phuoc
45 Laboratoire de Mathématiques de Besançon (UMR 6623) [LMB]
CHOULY, Franz
50 Institut de Mathématiques de Bourgogne [Dijon] [IMB]
LLERAS, Vanessa
410122 Université de Montpellier [UM]
LOBOS, Claudio
255588 Departamento de Ingenieria Informatica [Santiago]
LOZINSKI, Alexei
45 Laboratoire de Mathématiques de Besançon (UMR 6623) [LMB]
TOMAR, Satyendra
97637 Faculté des Sciences, de la Technologie et de la Communication [FSTC]
ccROHAN, Pierre-Yves
466360 Institut de Biomecanique Humaine Georges Charpak

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10985/17105
DOI
10.1016/j.apm.2019.07.055
Date
2020
Journal
Applied Mathematical Modelling

Abstract

Errors in biomechanics simulations arise from modelling and discretization. Modelling errors are due to the choice of the mathematical model whilst discretization errors measure the impact of the choice of the numerical method on the accuracy of the approximated solution to this specific mathematical model. A major source of discretization errors is mesh generation from medical images, that remains one of the major bottlenecks in the development of reliable, accurate, automatic and efficient personalized, clinically-relevant Finite Element (FE) models in biomechanics. The impact of mesh quality and density on the accuracy of the FE solution can be quantified with a posteriori error estimates. Yet, to our knowledge, the relevance of such error estimates for practical biomechanics problems has seldom been addressed, see Bui et al. (2018). In this contribution, we propose an implementation of some a posteriori error estimates to quantify the discretization errors and to optimize the mesh. More precisely, we focus on error estimation for a user-defined quantity of interest with the Dual Weighted Residual (DWR) technique. We test its applicability and relevance in three situations, corresponding to experiments in silicone samples and computations for a tongue and an artery, using a simplified setting, i.e., plane linearized elasticity with contractility of the soft tissue modeled as a pre-stress. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of such methodology to estimate the actual solution errors and to reduce them economically through mesh refinement.

Files in this item

Name:
IBHGC_AMM_2019_ROHAN.pdf
Size:
2.555Mb
Format:
PDF
Embargoed until:
2020-02-09
View/Open

Collections

  • Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak (IBHGC)

Related items

Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.

  • Digital twinning of Cellular Capsule Technology: Emerging outcomes from the perspective of porous media mechanics 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    URCUN, Stéphane; ccSKALLI, Wafa; NASSOY, Pierre; BORDAS, Stéphane Pierre Alain; SCIUMÈ, Giuseppe; ccROHAN, Pierre-Yves (Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2021)
    Spheroids encapsulated within alginate capsules are emerging as suitable in vitro tools to investigate the impact of mechanical forces on tumor growth since the internal tumor pressure can be retrieved from the deformation ...
  • Non-operable glioblastoma: Proposition of patient-specific forecasting by image-informed poromechanical model 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    ccURCUN, Stéphane; ccBAROLI, Davide; ccROHAN, Pierre-Yves; ccSKALLI, Wafa; ccLUBRANO, Vincent; BORDAS, Stéphane Pierre Alain; ccSCIUME, Giuseppe (Elsevier BV, 2023-03)
    We propose a novel image-informed glioblastoma mathematical model within a reactive multiphase poromechanical framework. Poromechanics offers to model in a coupled manner the interplay between tissue deformation and ...
  • Oncology and mechanics: Landmark studies and promising clinical applications 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    ccURCUN, Stéphane; LORENZO, Guillermo; ccBAROLI, Davide; ccROHAN, Pierre-Yves; ccSCIUME, Giuseppe; ccSKALLI, Wafa; ccLUBRANO, Vincent; BORDAS, Stéphane Pierre Alain (Elsevier, 2022-06)
    Clinical management of cancer has continuously evolved for several decades. Biochemical, molecular, and genomics approaches have brought and still bring numerous insights into cancerous diseases. It is now accepted that ...
  • Single and bi-compartment poro-elastic model of perfused biological soft tissues: FEniCSx implementation and tutorial 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    LAVIGNE, Thomas; ccURCUN, Stéphane; ccROHAN, Pierre-Yves; ccSCIUME, Giuseppe; ccBAROLI, Davide; BORDAS, Stéphane Pierre Alain (Elsevier, 2023-05)
    Soft biological tissues demonstrate strong time-dependent and strain-rate mechanical behavior, arising from their intrinsic visco-elasticity and fluid–solid interactions. The time-dependent mechanical properties of soft ...
  • Cortex tissue relaxation and slow to medium load rates dependency can be captured by a two-phase flow poroelastic model 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    URCUN, Stéphane; ROHAN, Pierre-Yves; SCIUMÈ, Giuseppe; BORDAS, Stéphane P.A. (Elsevier BV, 2021)
    This paper investigates the complex time-dependent behavior of cortex tissue, under adiabatic condition, using a two-phase flow poroelastic model. Motivated by experiments and Biot’s consolidation theory, we tackle ...

Browse

All SAMCommunities & CollectionsAuthorsIssue DateCenter / InstitutionThis CollectionAuthorsIssue DateCenter / Institution

Newsletter

Latest newsletterPrevious newsletters

Statistics

Most Popular ItemsStatistics by CountryMost Popular Authors

ÉCOLE NATIONALE SUPERIEURE D'ARTS ET METIERS

  • Contact
  • Mentions légales

ÉCOLE NATIONALE SUPERIEURE D'ARTS ET METIERS

  • Contact
  • Mentions légales