Fractal properties have been demonstrated in literature for several human vascular systems. In the frame of the investigation of additive manufacturing (AM) as a viable solution to prototype single arterial branches of human soft tissue organs, the paper provides a fractal analysis of the arterial tree of the human thyroid gland. The possibility that the thyroid arterial structure may be described as auto-similar is investigated, by studying injection-corrosion casts of the cadaveric gland. Vessel branching is analyzed by measuring branch diameters, ramification angles, and vessel lengths with the use of an optical microscope. Metrological results are made dimensionless by applying, as a scaling parameter, the caliber of major arteries. Data are then studied on a cumulative basis and processed to infer general rules for vessel branching. High resolution microtomography (mCT) is used to determine the spaces occupied by vascular branches and calculate their planar fractal dimension. Finally, the vascular tree has been simulated by a mixed, stochastic / deterministic algorithm based on diffusion limited aggregation (DLA), in which mean values of vascular variables are set as constraints. The purpose of this research is to understand if fractality can be reliably assumed for computational modeling of the organ anatomy, in order to be able to produce, by AM, more representative physical prototypes and scaffolds. The finding allow to affirm that the human thyroid arterial structure exhibits a degree of auto similarity.

TOWARDS ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING OF RAMIFIED SCAFFOLDS OF THE THYROID VASCULAR SYSTEM: A PRELIMINARY FRACTAL ANALYSIS

Giulia Spaletta;Salvatore Mosca;
2018

Abstract

Fractal properties have been demonstrated in literature for several human vascular systems. In the frame of the investigation of additive manufacturing (AM) as a viable solution to prototype single arterial branches of human soft tissue organs, the paper provides a fractal analysis of the arterial tree of the human thyroid gland. The possibility that the thyroid arterial structure may be described as auto-similar is investigated, by studying injection-corrosion casts of the cadaveric gland. Vessel branching is analyzed by measuring branch diameters, ramification angles, and vessel lengths with the use of an optical microscope. Metrological results are made dimensionless by applying, as a scaling parameter, the caliber of major arteries. Data are then studied on a cumulative basis and processed to infer general rules for vessel branching. High resolution microtomography (mCT) is used to determine the spaces occupied by vascular branches and calculate their planar fractal dimension. Finally, the vascular tree has been simulated by a mixed, stochastic / deterministic algorithm based on diffusion limited aggregation (DLA), in which mean values of vascular variables are set as constraints. The purpose of this research is to understand if fractality can be reliably assumed for computational modeling of the organ anatomy, in order to be able to produce, by AM, more representative physical prototypes and scaffolds. The finding allow to affirm that the human thyroid arterial structure exhibits a degree of auto similarity.
2018
Elena Bassoli, Lucia Denti, Andrea Gatto, Giulia Spaletta, Mark Sofroniou, Annapaola Parrilli, Milena Fini, Roberto Giardino, Alessandra Zamparelli, Nicoletta Zini, Fulvio Barbaro, Elena Bassi, Salvatore Mosca, Davide Dallatana, Roberto Toni
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/648558
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