Noninvasive measurement of mechanical wave motion (sound and vibration) in the lungs may be of diagnostic value, as it can provide information about the mechanical properties of the lungs, which in turn are affected by disease and injury. In this study, two previously derived theoretical models of the vibroacoustic behavior of the lung parenchyma are compared: (1) a Biot theory of poroviscoelasticity and (2) an effective medium theory for compression wave behavior (also known as a “bubble swarm” model). A fractional derivative formulation of shear viscoelasticity is integrated into both models. A measurable “fast” compression wave speed predicted by the Biot theory formulation has a significant frequency dependence that is not predicted by the effective medium theory. Biot theory also predicts a slow compression wave. The experimentally measured fast compression wave speed and attenuation in a pig lung ex vivo model agreed well with the Biot theory. To obtain the parameters for the Biot theory prediction, the following experiments were undertaken: quasistatic mechanical indentation measurements were performed to estimate the lung static shear modulus; surface wave measurements were performed to estimate lung tissue shear viscoelasticity; and flow permeability was measured on dried lung specimens. This study suggests that the Biot theory may provide a more robust and accurate model than the effective medium theory for wave propagation in the lungs over a wider frequency range.
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October 2014
Research-Article
Comparison of Poroviscoelastic Models for Sound and Vibration in the Lungs
Zoujun Dai,
Zoujun Dai
University of Illinois at Chicago
,Chicago, IL 60607
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Ying Peng,
Ying Peng
University of Illinois at Chicago
,Chicago, IL 60607
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Hansen A. Mansy,
Hansen A. Mansy
University of Central Florida
,Orlando, FL 32816
Rush University Medical Center
,Chicago, IL 60612
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Richard H. Sandler,
Richard H. Sandler
University of Central Florida
,Orlando, FL 32816
Nemours Children's Hospital
,Orlando, FL 32827
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Thomas J. Royston
Thomas J. Royston
1
1Corresponding author.
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Zoujun Dai
University of Illinois at Chicago
,Chicago, IL 60607
Ying Peng
University of Illinois at Chicago
,Chicago, IL 60607
Hansen A. Mansy
University of Central Florida
,Orlando, FL 32816
Rush University Medical Center
,Chicago, IL 60612
Richard H. Sandler
University of Central Florida
,Orlando, FL 32816
Nemours Children's Hospital
,Orlando, FL 32827
Thomas J. Royston
1Corresponding author.
Contributed by the Design Engineering Division of ASME for publication in the JOURNAL OF VIBRATION AND ACOUSTICS. Manuscript received October 31, 2013; final manuscript received December 18, 2013; published online July 25, 2014. Editor: Noel C. Perkins.
J. Vib. Acoust. Oct 2014, 136(5): 050905 (11 pages)
Published Online: July 25, 2014
Article history
Received:
October 31, 2013
Revision Received:
December 18, 2013
Citation
Dai, Z., Peng, Y., Mansy, H. A., Sandler, R. H., and Royston, T. J. (July 25, 2014). "Comparison of Poroviscoelastic Models for Sound and Vibration in the Lungs." ASME. J. Vib. Acoust. October 2014; 136(5): 050905. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4026436
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