Generating fibre orientation maps in human heart models using Poisson interpolation |
| |
Authors: | Jonathan Wong Ellen Kuhl |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA;2. Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA;3. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA |
| |
Abstract: | Smoothly varying muscle fibre orientations in the heart are critical to its electrical and mechanical function. From detailed histological studies and diffusion tensor imaging, we now know that fibre orientations in humans vary gradually from approximately ? 70° in the outer wall to +80° in the inner wall. However, the creation of fibre orientation maps for computational analyses remains one of the most challenging problems in cardiac electrophysiology and cardiac mechanics. Here, we show that Poisson interpolation generates smoothly varying vector fields that satisfy a set of user-defined constraints in arbitrary domains. Specifically, we enforce the Poisson interpolation in the weak sense using a standard linear finite element algorithm for scalar-valued second-order boundary value problems and introduce the feature to be interpolated as a global unknown. User-defined constraints are then simply enforced in the strong sense as Dirichlet boundary conditions. We demonstrate that the proposed concept is capable of generating smoothly varying fibre orientations, quickly, efficiently and robustly, both in a generic bi-ventricular model and in a patient-specific human heart. Sensitivity analyses demonstrate that the underlying algorithm is conceptually able to handle both arbitrarily and uniformly distributed user-defined constraints; however, the quality of the interpolation is best for uniformly distributed constraints. We anticipate our algorithm to be immediately transformative to experimental and clinical settings, in which it will allow us to quickly and reliably create smooth interpolations of arbitrary fields from data-sets, which are sparse but uniformly distributed. |
| |
Keywords: | feature-based interpolation Poisson equation finite element method anisotropy fibre orientation cardiac electrophysiology |
|
|