List of results published directly linked with the projects co-funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under the María de Maeztu Units of Excellence Program (MDM-2015-0502).

List of publications acknowledging the funding in Scopus.

The record for each publication will include access to postprints (following the Open Access policy of the program), as well as datasets and software used. Ongoing work with UPF Library and Informatics will improve the interface and automation of the retrieval of this information soon.

The MdM Strategic Research Program has its own community in Zenodo for material available in this repository   as well as at the UPF e-repository   

 

 

Back Toumanidou T, Noailly J, Ceresa M, Zhang C, López-Linares K, Macía I, González Ballester M.A. Patient-specific modeling of unruptured human abdominal aortic aneurysms using deformable hexahedral meshes. International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery

Toumanidou T, Noailly J, Ceresa M, Zhang C, López-Linares K, Macía I, González Ballester M.A. Patient-specific modeling of unruptured human abdominal aortic aneurysms using deformable hexahedral meshes. International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery, vol. 12, Suppl. 1 (CARS 2017)

Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) disease is a pathological dilation of the aorta involving degeneration of the wall and can lead to aneurysmal rupture with a 90% mortality rate. Although the maximum transverse AAA diameter (DMAX) is the most commonly used predictor of rupture risk and warrants surgery for DMAX>5.5 cm, the reported rupture for smaller aneurysms is up to 23%. Instead, wall stresses obtained through finite element (FE) models that consider the heterogeneous and anisotropic behavior of the wall layers were suggested as a more accurate rupture predictor. Our goal is the generation of patient-specific volumetric FE meshes of unruptured AAA via open-source and automatic workflows aiming to address the following challenges: -Structured hexahedral meshes are required for mesh convergence in the radial direction -Thrombus and outer wall segmentation is challenging because of lack of contrast and fuzzy borders -The workflow should involve few if any manual operations -Ideally, open-source libraries would allow for adaptation of the workflow to any geometry