论文标题
弥漫性轴突损伤的机电损伤的正面分析
Head-to-nerve analysis of electromechanical impairments of diffuse axonal injury
论文作者
论文摘要
目的是通过有限的元素模拟,研究额头头撞击后神经束中弥漫性轴突损伤(DAI)的机械和功能失效。通过使用3D头模型在宏观上模拟了创伤性脑损伤后的解剖变化。额头头的速度为2.5-7.5 m/s,在大脑的白质中诱导轻度至中度的dai。研究细胞水平上诱导的机电反应变化的研究是在两个缩放的神经束模型中进行的,一个模型带有髓神经纤维,另一个带有无髓神经纤维。通过使用实时完全耦合的机电框架来模拟DAI的发生,该框架结合了神经束模型中每个三层纤维的调制阈值,用于尖峰激活和独立的电特性变化。使用3D神经束模型,使用了大脑模型白质模拟菌株的幅度来确定伸长模拟中的位移边界条件。在高冲击速度下,机械故障发生在大型非髓样束的低应变值下发生,而不是髓鞘束或小的无髓束。在加载过程中和之后,信号传播在大的骨髓束中持续,尽管加载过程中的基线电压发生了很大的变化。在神经束模型中生成的塑性应变与头部模型的冲击速度和标称菌株之间观察到线性关系。髓磷脂层可保护纤维免受机械损伤,并保留其功能。
The aim was to investigate mechanical and functional failure of diffuse axonal injury (DAI) in nerve bundles following frontal head impacts, by finite element simulations. Anatomical changes following traumatic brain injury are simulated at the macroscale by using a 3D head model. Frontal head impacts at speeds of 2.5-7.5 m/s induce mild-to-moderate DAI in the white matter of the brain. Investigation of the changes in induced electromechanical responses at the cellular level is carried out in two scaled nerve bundle models, one with myelinated nerve fibres, the other with unmyelinated nerve fibres. DAI occurrence is simulated by using a real-time fully coupled electromechanical framework, which combines a modulated threshold for spiking activation and independent alteration of the electrical properties for each three-layer fibre in the nerve bundle models. The magnitudes of simulated strains in the white matter of the brain model are used to determine the displacement boundary conditions in elongation simulations using the 3D nerve bundle models. At high impact speed, mechanical failure occurs at lower strain values in large unmyelinated bundles than in myelinated bundles or small unmyelinated bundles; signal propagation continues in large myelinated bundles during and after loading, although there is a large shift in baseline voltage during loading; a linear relationship is observed between the generated plastic strain in the nerve bundle models and the impact speed and nominal strains of the head model. The myelin layer protects the fibre from mechanical damage, preserving its functionalities.