论文标题

吸入的弹性毛细血管网络模型

Elastocapillary network model of inhalation

论文作者

Louf, Jean-François, Kratz, Felix, Datta, Sujit S.

论文摘要

看似简单的吸入过程依赖于胸部肌肉收缩,单个肺部分支中的弹性毛细血管相互作用,不同连接的分支之间的空气传播以及进入肺部的总体空气流量之间的复杂相互作用。这些过程发生在相当不同的长度和时间尺度上。因此,将它们与肺的生物力学特性联系起来,并量化它们如何共同控制吸入的时空特征,这仍然是一个挑战。我们通过开发肺的计算模型作为一个连接的液体衬里柔性圆柱体的分层分支网络来应对这一挑战,该网络与粘弹性胸腔腔耦合。每个分支以输入生物力学参数确定的速率和压力打开,使我们能够测试肺组织机械性能的变化以及分泌对吸入动力学的影响。通过求和所有分支的动力学,我们量化了吸入过程中总肺压力和体积的演变,从而再现了测得的呼吸曲线的形状。 Using this model, we demonstrate how changes in lung muscle contraction, mucus viscosity and surface tension, and airway wall stiffness---characteristic of many respiratory diseases, including those arising from COVID-19, cystic fibrosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, and emphysema---drastically alter inhaled lung capacity and breathing duration.因此,我们的工作有助于确定控制呼吸动态的关键因素,并提供了一种量化疾病引起的这些因素变化如何导致呼吸窘迫的方法。

The seemingly simple process of inhalation relies on a complex interplay between muscular contraction in the thorax, elasto-capillary interactions in individual lung branches, propagation of air between different connected branches, and overall air flow into the lungs. These processes occur over considerably different length and time scales; consequently, linking them to the biomechanical properties of the lungs, and quantifying how they together control the spatiotemporal features of inhalation, remains a challenge. We address this challenge by developing a computational model of the lungs as a hierarchical, branched network of connected liquid-lined flexible cylinders coupled to a viscoelastic thoracic cavity. Each branch opens at a rate and a pressure that is determined by input biomechanical parameters, enabling us to test the influence of changes in the mechanical properties of lung tissues and secretions on inhalation dynamics. By summing the dynamics of all the branches, we quantify the evolution of overall lung pressure and volume during inhalation, reproducing the shape of measured breathing curves. Using this model, we demonstrate how changes in lung muscle contraction, mucus viscosity and surface tension, and airway wall stiffness---characteristic of many respiratory diseases, including those arising from COVID-19, cystic fibrosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, and emphysema---drastically alter inhaled lung capacity and breathing duration. Our work therefore helps to identify the key factors that control breathing dynamics, and provides a way to quantify how disease-induced changes in these factors lead to respiratory distress.

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