Human brain FE modeling including incompressible fluid dynamics of intraventricular cerebrospinal fluid

2021 
Abstract Elucidating the mechanisms of mild traumatic brain injuries (mild TBIs), including concussions, is important for developing brain injury criteria and designing head protection devices. Using a finite element (FE) model of the human brain to predict the deformation of the brain parenchyma during a head impact could provide mechanical insights on mild TBIs. However, most conventional brain FE models do not consider how fluid behavior and the perfusion pressure of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) will affect brain deformation. This study proposes a novel brain FE model that uses incompressible fluid dynamics (ICFD) to represent the fluid behavior of CSF in the ventricle. In the model with ICFD, the validation accuracy scores on the brain strain during a head impact with a rotational acceleration were significantly higher than those in the model without ICFD. Reconstruction simulations based on two reported mild TBI cases from a rear-end collision and an American football game were conducted using the model with and without ICFD. We found that the maximum principal strain values in the subcortical region and corpus callosum of the model with ICFD were higher and lasted longer than those of the model without ICFD, and this tendency was further enhanced when perfusion pressure was applied. These findings suggested that the fluid behavior and perfusion pressure of the intraventricular CSF could significantly affect the deformation of the brain parenchyma during head impacts. The proposed brain multiphysical FE model could enhance the understanding of mild TBI mechanisms.
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