Session | ||
S1: MS02 - 1: Cardiovacular inverse problems
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Presentations | ||
11:00am - 11:20am
Parameter estimation in cardiac fluid–structure interaction from fluid and solid measurements University of Groningen, The Netherlands Patient-specific cardiac simulations require the calibration of physical model parameters from measurements of the patient's physiology. Parameter estimation in the heart has been conducted so far using measurements in the myocardium, typically displacement surrogates obtained from MRI. To the best of the authors' knowledge, parameter estimation in cardiac mechanics using velocity images of the ventricular blood flow has remained unexplored. This study assesses the use of Eulerian volumetric velocity images of the ventricular blood flow for estimating material properties of a physiological fully-dimensional fluid–structure interaction (FSI) model of the systolic phase of the heart contraction. 11:20am - 11:40am
Electrophysiological parameter estimation for cardiac modeling using differential evolution 1Institute for Information Technologies, University of Kragujevac, Serbia; 2Research and development center for Bioengineering, Kragujevac, Serbia; 3Belgrade Metropolitan University, Belgrade, Serbia Accurate estimation of electrophysiological parameters is crucial for understanding and modeling the dynamic behavior of cardiac tissues across the cardiac cycle, which includes phases of depolarization, repolarization, and refractory periods. These phases underpin the generation and propagation of action potentials that coordinate rhythmic contractions of the heart. In this study, we propose a robust parameter estimation framework based on Differential Evolution (DE) to infer hidden parameters of nonlinear cardiac models. DE, a population-based global optimization algorithm, is particularly suited for handling the nonlinearity and high dimensionality inherent in biological systems. We first demonstrate the effectiveness of DE using the Van der Pol oscillator, a simplified excitable system that mimics the cyclical behavior of cardiac cells. Building on this foundation, we apply our method to more detailed and physiologically relevant models, including the FitzHugh-Nagumo model, which captures essential features of excitability and recovery in cardiac membranes, and the O'Hara-Rudy (ORd) model, which represents detailed ion channel kinetics, intracellular calcium handling, and membrane potential dynamics in human ventricular myocytes. These models are critical for simulating normal and pathological conditions such as early afterdepolarizations, arrhythmias, and conduction blocks. Our results show that DE can accurately recover key parameters even in the presence of sparse or noisy measurements. This highlights DE's value as a powerful tool for inverse modeling in computational cardiology, enabling deeper insight into the mechanisms of cardiac excitability, arrhythmogenesis, and potential therapeutic interventions. 11:40am - 12:00pm
Efficient calculation of reference configuration on fully nonlinear poroelastic media 1Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile; 2RICAM, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria; 3Johannes Kepler University, Austria In computational biomedicine, model geometry generation is commonly based on images, which are typically assumed to be at rest and free from external stimuli. However, biological structures are often in mechanical equilibrium under various forces or transitioning between states, necessitating a more dynamic modeling approach. We present a framework that extends the classical formulation of stress-free geometry computation, known as the inverse elasticity problem (IEP), to fully nonlinear poroelastic media. Our approach involves expressing the governing equations in terms of the reference porosity and defining a time-dependent problem where the steady-state solution corresponds to the reference porosity. We introduce Anderson acceleration as a means to significantly enhance computational speed, achieving up to an 80% reduction in the number of iterations. Furthermore, we identify an inconsistency in the primal formulation of the nonlinear mass conservation equations, arising from second-order derivatives of the strain, which we resolve using appropriate mixed formulations. |