The development of intraventricular haemorrhages (IVH) in preterm
newborns is triggered by a disruption of the vessels responsible for
cerebral microcirculation. Analysis of the stresses exerted on vessel
walls enables the identification of the critical values of cerebral
blood flow (CBF) associated with the development of IVH in preterm
infants. The purpose of the present study is the estimation of these
critical CBF values using the biomechanical stresses obtained by the
finite element modelling of immature brain capillaries. The properties
of the endothelial cells and basement membranes employed were selected
on the basis of published nanoindentation measurements using atomic
force microscopes. The forces acting on individual capillaries were
derived with a mathematical model that accounts for the peculiarities of
microvascularity in the immature brain. Calculations were based on
clinical measurements obtained from 254 preterm infants with the
gestational age ranging from 23 to 30 weeks, with and without diagnosis
of IVH. No distinction between the affected and control groups with the
gestational age of 23 to 26 weeks was possible. For infants with the
gestational age of 27 to 30 weeks, the CBF value of 17.03 ml/100 g/min
was determined as the critical upper value, above which the likelihood
of IVH increases.
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