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How growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain

Brain is an actuator for control and coordination. When a pathology arises in cranium, it may leave a degenerative, disfiguring and destabilizing impact on brain physiology. However, the leading consequences of the same may vary from case to case. Tumour, in this context, is a special type of pathol...

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Autores principales: Ahmed, Ali, UlHaq, Muhammad Uzair, Mustansar, Zartasha, Shaukat, Arslan, Margetts, Lee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8479368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34631118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.210165
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author Ahmed, Ali
UlHaq, Muhammad Uzair
Mustansar, Zartasha
Shaukat, Arslan
Margetts, Lee
author_facet Ahmed, Ali
UlHaq, Muhammad Uzair
Mustansar, Zartasha
Shaukat, Arslan
Margetts, Lee
author_sort Ahmed, Ali
collection PubMed
description Brain is an actuator for control and coordination. When a pathology arises in cranium, it may leave a degenerative, disfiguring and destabilizing impact on brain physiology. However, the leading consequences of the same may vary from case to case. Tumour, in this context, is a special type of pathology which deforms brain parenchyma permanently. From translational perspective, deformation mechanics and pressures, specifically the intracranial cerebral pressure (ICP) in a tumour-housed brain, have not been addressed holistically in literature. This is an important area to investigate in neuropathy prognosis. To address this, we aim to solve the pressure mystery in a tumour-based brain in this study and present a fairly workable methodology. Using image-based finite-element modelling, we reconstruct a tumour-based brain and probe resulting deformations and pressures (ICP). Tumour is grown by dilating the voxel region by 16 and 30 mm uniformly. Cumulatively three cases are studied including an existing stage of the tumour. Pressures of cerebrospinal fluid due to its flow inside the ventricle region are also provided to make the model anatomically realistic. Comparison of obtained results unequivocally shows that as the tumour region increases its area and size, deformation pattern changes extensively and spreads throughout the brain volume with a greater concentration in tumour vicinity. Second, we conclude that ICP pressures inside the cranium do increase substantially; however, they still remain under the normal values (15 mmHg). In the end, a correlation relationship of ICP mechanics and tumour is addressed. From a diagnostic purpose, this result also explains why generally a tumour in its initial stage does not show symptoms because the required ICP threshold has not been crossed. We finally conclude that even at low ICP values, substantial deformation progression inside the cranium is possible. This may result in plastic deformation, midline shift etc. in the brain.
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spelling pubmed-84793682021-10-08 How growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain Ahmed, Ali UlHaq, Muhammad Uzair Mustansar, Zartasha Shaukat, Arslan Margetts, Lee R Soc Open Sci Engineering Brain is an actuator for control and coordination. When a pathology arises in cranium, it may leave a degenerative, disfiguring and destabilizing impact on brain physiology. However, the leading consequences of the same may vary from case to case. Tumour, in this context, is a special type of pathology which deforms brain parenchyma permanently. From translational perspective, deformation mechanics and pressures, specifically the intracranial cerebral pressure (ICP) in a tumour-housed brain, have not been addressed holistically in literature. This is an important area to investigate in neuropathy prognosis. To address this, we aim to solve the pressure mystery in a tumour-based brain in this study and present a fairly workable methodology. Using image-based finite-element modelling, we reconstruct a tumour-based brain and probe resulting deformations and pressures (ICP). Tumour is grown by dilating the voxel region by 16 and 30 mm uniformly. Cumulatively three cases are studied including an existing stage of the tumour. Pressures of cerebrospinal fluid due to its flow inside the ventricle region are also provided to make the model anatomically realistic. Comparison of obtained results unequivocally shows that as the tumour region increases its area and size, deformation pattern changes extensively and spreads throughout the brain volume with a greater concentration in tumour vicinity. Second, we conclude that ICP pressures inside the cranium do increase substantially; however, they still remain under the normal values (15 mmHg). In the end, a correlation relationship of ICP mechanics and tumour is addressed. From a diagnostic purpose, this result also explains why generally a tumour in its initial stage does not show symptoms because the required ICP threshold has not been crossed. We finally conclude that even at low ICP values, substantial deformation progression inside the cranium is possible. This may result in plastic deformation, midline shift etc. in the brain. The Royal Society 2021-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8479368/ /pubmed/34631118 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.210165 Text en © 2021 The Authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Engineering
Ahmed, Ali
UlHaq, Muhammad Uzair
Mustansar, Zartasha
Shaukat, Arslan
Margetts, Lee
How growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain
title How growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain
title_full How growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain
title_fullStr How growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain
title_full_unstemmed How growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain
title_short How growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain
title_sort how growing tumour impacts intracranial pressure and deformation mechanics of brain
topic Engineering
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8479368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34631118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.210165
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