A numerical-experimental protocol to characterize corneal tissue with an application to predict astigmatic keratotomy surgery

Tonometers are intended to determine the intraocular pressure (IOP) and the quality of corneal tissue. In contrast to the physiological state of stress of the cornea, tonometers induce non-physiological bending stress. Recently, the use of a single experiment to calibrate a set of corneal mechanical...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials 2017-10, Vol.74, p.304-314
Hauptverfasser: Ariza-Gracia, M Á, Ortillés, Á, Cristóbal, J Á, Rodríguez Matas, J F, Calvo, B
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container_title Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials
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creator Ariza-Gracia, M Á
Ortillés, Á
Cristóbal, J Á
Rodríguez Matas, J F
Calvo, B
description Tonometers are intended to determine the intraocular pressure (IOP) and the quality of corneal tissue. In contrast to the physiological state of stress of the cornea, tonometers induce non-physiological bending stress. Recently, the use of a single experiment to calibrate a set of corneal mechanical properties was suggested to be an ill-posed problem. Thus, we propose a numerical-experimental protocol that uses inflation and indentation experiments simultaneously, restricting the optimization space to circumvent the ambiguity of the fitting. For the first time, both corneal behaviors, i.e., biaxial tension (physiological) and bending (non-physiological), are taken into account. The experimental protocol was performed using an animal model (New Zealand rabbit's cornea). The patient-specific geometry and IOP were registered using a MODI topographer (CSO, Italy) and an applanation tonometer, respectively. The mechanical response was evaluated using inflation and indentation experiments. Subsequently, the optimal set of material properties is identified via an inverse finite element method. To validate the methodology, an in vivo incisional refractive surgery (astigmatic keratotomy, AK) is performed on four animals. The optical outcomes showed a good agreement between the real and simulated surgeries, indicating that the protocol can provide a reliable set of mechanical properties that enables further applications and simulations. After a reliable ex vivo database of inflation experiments is built, our protocol could be extended to humans.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2017.06.017
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Animals
Astigmatism - surgery
Cornea - surgery
Humans
Intraocular Pressure
Keratotomy, Radial
Models, Theoretical
Rabbits
Tonometry, Ocular
title A numerical-experimental protocol to characterize corneal tissue with an application to predict astigmatic keratotomy surgery
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