Critical roles of time-scales in soft tissue growth and remodeling

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Abstract

Most soft biological tissues exhibit a remarkable ability to adapt to sustained changes in mechanical loads. These macroscale adaptations, resulting from mechanobiological cellular responses, are important determinants of physiological behaviors and thus clinical outcomes. Given the complexity of such adaptations, computational models can significantly increase our understanding of how contributions of different cell types or matrix constituents, and their rates of turnover and evolving properties, ultimately change the geometry and biomechanical behavior at the tissue level. In this paper, we examine relative roles of the rates of tissue responses and external loading and present a new rate-independent approach for modeling the evolution of soft tissue growth and remodeling. For illustrative purposes, we also present numerical results for arterial adaptations. In particular, we show that, for problems defined by particular characteristic times, this approximate theory captures well the predictions of a fully general constrained mixture theory at a fraction of the computational cost.

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Latorre, M., & Humphrey, J. D. (2018). Critical roles of time-scales in soft tissue growth and remodeling. APL Bioengineering, 2(2). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5017842

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