TY - JOUR
T1 - The importance of a full chemo-poro-mechanical coupling for the modeling of subcutaneous injections
AU - Gil, Ludovic
AU - Jabbour, Michel
AU - Triantafyllidis, Nicolas
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/11/1
Y1 - 2024/11/1
N2 - Modeling of subcutaneous injections in soft adipose tissue – a common way to administer pharmaceutical medication – is a challenging multiphysics problem which has recently attracted the attention of the engineering community, as it could help optimize medical devices and treatments. The underlying continuum mechanics of this process is complex and involves finite strain poro-mechanics – where a viscous fluid, containing different charged species, is injected into a porous viscoelastic matrix and absorbed by blood and lymph vessels – as well as electrochemistry, that generates osmotic pressure due to electrical charges attached to the tissue. In this paper, we present a chemo-mechanical model of subcutaneous injections that accounts for the diffusion of electrically charged chemical species – contained in the interstitial fluid – into the tissue, blood and lymph vessels. This work provides the methodology to derive a general theory accounting for the electro-chemo-poro-mechanical couplings in a thermodynamically consistent framework, avoiding phenomenological biases or inconsistencies likely to arise in the derivation of nonlinear theories with many couplings. To motivate its use for the modeling of subcutaneous injections, it is complemented by a simplified, linearized boundary value problem that illustrates the importance of considering these couplings for the prediction of subcutaneous injections key performance indicators.
AB - Modeling of subcutaneous injections in soft adipose tissue – a common way to administer pharmaceutical medication – is a challenging multiphysics problem which has recently attracted the attention of the engineering community, as it could help optimize medical devices and treatments. The underlying continuum mechanics of this process is complex and involves finite strain poro-mechanics – where a viscous fluid, containing different charged species, is injected into a porous viscoelastic matrix and absorbed by blood and lymph vessels – as well as electrochemistry, that generates osmotic pressure due to electrical charges attached to the tissue. In this paper, we present a chemo-mechanical model of subcutaneous injections that accounts for the diffusion of electrically charged chemical species – contained in the interstitial fluid – into the tissue, blood and lymph vessels. This work provides the methodology to derive a general theory accounting for the electro-chemo-poro-mechanical couplings in a thermodynamically consistent framework, avoiding phenomenological biases or inconsistencies likely to arise in the derivation of nonlinear theories with many couplings. To motivate its use for the modeling of subcutaneous injections, it is complemented by a simplified, linearized boundary value problem that illustrates the importance of considering these couplings for the prediction of subcutaneous injections key performance indicators.
KW - Chemo-mechanical couplings
KW - Finite strain
KW - Subcutaneous injections
U2 - 10.1016/j.jmps.2024.105833
DO - 10.1016/j.jmps.2024.105833
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85202294993
SN - 0022-5096
VL - 192
JO - Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids
JF - Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids
M1 - 105833
ER -