BMC Bioinformatics (Dec 2019)

A personalized computational model of edema formation in myocarditis based on long-axis biventricular MRI images

  • Ruy Freitas Reis,
  • Juliano Lara Fernandes,
  • Thaiz Ruberti Schmal,
  • Bernardo Martins Rocha,
  • Rodrigo Weber dos Santos,
  • Marcelo Lobosco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-019-3139-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. S6
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Myocarditis is defined as the inflammation of the myocardium, i.e. the cardiac muscle. Among the reasons that lead to this disease, we may include infections caused by a virus, bacteria, protozoa, fungus, and others. One of the signs of the inflammation is the formation of edema, which may be a consequence of the interaction between interstitial fluid dynamics and immune response. This complex physiological process was mathematically modeled using a nonlinear system of partial differential equations (PDE) based on porous media approach. By combing a model based on Biot’s poroelasticity theory with a model for the immune response we developed a new hydro-mechanical model for inflammatory edema. To verify this new computational model, T2 parametric mapping obtained by Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging was used to identify the region of edema in a patient diagnosed with unspecific myocarditis. Results A patient-specific geometrical model was created using MRI images from the patient with myocarditis. With this model, edema formation was simulated using the proposed hydro-mechanical mathematical model in a two-dimensional domain. The computer simulations allowed us to correlate spatiotemporal dynamics of representative cells of the immune systems, such as leucocytes and the pathogen, with fluid accumulation and cardiac tissue deformation. Conclusions This study demonstrates that the proposed mathematical model is a very promising tool to better understand edema formation in myocarditis. Simulations obtained from a patient-specific model reproduced important aspects related to the formation of cardiac edema, its area, position, and shape, and how these features are related to immune response.

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