Electro-mechanical Lung Simulator Using Polymer and Organic Human Lung Equivalents for Realistic Breathing Simulation

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Date
2019-12-24
ORCID
Advisor
Referee
Mark
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Altmetrics
Abstract
Simulation models in respiratory research are increasingly used for medical product development and testing, especially because in-vivo models are coupled with a high degree of complexity and ethical concerns. This work introduces a respiratory simulation system, which is bridging the gap between the complex, real anatomical environment and the safe, cost-effective simulation methods. The presented electro-mechanical lung simulator, xPULM, combines in-silico, ex-vivo and mechanical respiratory approaches by realistically replicating an actively breathing human lung. The reproducibility of sinusoidal breathing simulations with xPULM was verified for selected breathing frequencies (10-18 bpm) and tidal volumes (400-600 ml) physiologically occurring during human breathing at rest. Human lung anatomy was modelled using latex bags and primed porcine lungs. High reproducibility of flow and pressure characteristics was shown by evaluating breathing cycles (n(Total) = 3273) with highest standard deviation vertical bar 3 sigma vertical bar for both, simplified lung equivalents (mu(V) = 23.98 +/- 1.04 l/min, mu(P) = -0.78 +/- 0.63 hPa) and primed porcine lungs (mu(V) = 18.87 +/- 2.49 l/min, mu(P) = -21.13 +/- 1.47 hPa). The adaptability of the breathing simulation parameters, coupled with the use of porcine lungs salvaged from a slaughterhouse process, represents an advancement towards anatomically and physiologically realistic modelling of human respiration.
Description
Citation
Scientific Reports. 2019, vol. 9, issue 9, p. 1-12.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-56176-6#article-info
Document type
Peer-reviewed
Document version
Published version
Date of access to the full text
Language of document
en
Study field
Comittee
Date of acceptance
Defence
Result of defence
Document licence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Citace PRO