Options
Electromechanical computational model of the human stomach
Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.16276
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2025-11-25
Sprache
English
TORE-DOI
Volume
449
Issue
Part B
Article Number
118549
Citation
Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering 449 Part B: 118549 (2026)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Publisher
Elsevier
The stomach plays a central role in digestion through coordinated muscle contractions, known as gastric peristalsis, driven by slow-wave electrophysiology. Understanding this process is critical for treating motility disorders such as gastroparesis, dyspepsia, and gastroesophageal reflux disease. Computer simulations can be a valuable tool to deepen our understanding of these disorders and help to develop new therapies. However, existing approaches often neglect spatial heterogeneity, fail to capture large anisotropic deformations, or rely on computationally expensive three-dimensional formulations. We present here a computational framework of human gastric electromechanics, that combines a nonlinear, rotation-free shell formulation with a constrained mixture material model. The formulation incorporates active-strain, constituent-specific prestress, and spatially non-uniform parameter fields. Numerical examples demonstrate that the framework can reproduce characteristic features of gastric motility, including slow-wave entrainment, conduction velocity gradients, and large peristaltic contractions with physiologically realistic amplitudes. The proposed framework enables robust electromechanical simulations of the whole stomach at the organ scale. It thus provides a promising basis for future in silico studies of both physiological function and pathological motility disorders.
Subjects
Constrained mixture
Electromechanics
Gastric
Peristaltic contractions
Personalized medicine
Simulation
DDC Class
610: Medicine, Health
Publication version
publishedVersion
Loading...
Name
1-s2.0-S0045782525008217-main.pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
11.54 MB
Format
Adobe PDF