We present a patient-specific finite element model of the human cornea that accounts for the presence of the epithelium. The thin anterior layer that protects the cornea from the external actions has a scant relevance from the mechanical point of view, and it has been neglected in most numerical models of the cornea, which assign to the entire cornea the mechanical properties of the stroma. Yet, modern corneal topographers capture the geometry of the epithelium, which can be naturally included into a patient-specific solid model of the cornea, treated as a multi-layer solid. For numerical applications, the presence of a thin layer on the anterior cornea requires a finer discretization and the definition of two constitutive models (including the corresponding properties) for stroma and epithelium. In this study, we want to assess the relevance of the inclusion of the epithelium in the model of the cornea, by analyzing the effects in terms of uncertainties of the mechanical properties, stress distribution across the thickness, and numerical discretization. We conclude that if the epithelium is modeled as stroma, the material properties should be reduced by 10%. While this choice represents a sufficiently good approximation for the simulation of in vivo mechanical tests, it might result into an under-estimation of the postoperative stress in the simulation of refractive surgery.

The inclusion of the epithelium in numerical models of the human cornea

Pandolfi A.
2024-01-01

Abstract

We present a patient-specific finite element model of the human cornea that accounts for the presence of the epithelium. The thin anterior layer that protects the cornea from the external actions has a scant relevance from the mechanical point of view, and it has been neglected in most numerical models of the cornea, which assign to the entire cornea the mechanical properties of the stroma. Yet, modern corneal topographers capture the geometry of the epithelium, which can be naturally included into a patient-specific solid model of the cornea, treated as a multi-layer solid. For numerical applications, the presence of a thin layer on the anterior cornea requires a finer discretization and the definition of two constitutive models (including the corresponding properties) for stroma and epithelium. In this study, we want to assess the relevance of the inclusion of the epithelium in the model of the cornea, by analyzing the effects in terms of uncertainties of the mechanical properties, stress distribution across the thickness, and numerical discretization. We conclude that if the epithelium is modeled as stroma, the material properties should be reduced by 10%. While this choice represents a sufficiently good approximation for the simulation of in vivo mechanical tests, it might result into an under-estimation of the postoperative stress in the simulation of refractive surgery.
2024
Anisotropy
Epithelium modeling
Finite elements
In-depth stromal stiffening
Nonlinear material models
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1278648
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