Cardiac electro-mechanical activity in a deforming human cardiac tissue: modeling, existence-uniqueness, finite element computation and application to multiple ischemic disease
DOI10.1007/S00285-022-01717-3zbMATH Open1492.35375OpenAlexW4211036837WikidataQ113905406 ScholiaQ113905406MaRDI QIDQ2113516FDOQ2113516
Publication date: 14 March 2022
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00285-022-01717-3
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finite element methodexistence-uniquenesselectro-mechanical couplingcoupled PDE-ODEsFaedo Galerkin methodmultiple cardiac ischemia
Initial value problems, existence, uniqueness, continuous dependence and continuation of solutions to ordinary differential equations (34A12) Existence problems for PDEs: global existence, local existence, non-existence (35A01) Uniqueness problems for PDEs: global uniqueness, local uniqueness, non-uniqueness (35A02) PDEs in connection with biology, chemistry and other natural sciences (35Q92) Finite difference methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs (65M06) Finite element, Rayleigh-Ritz and Galerkin methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs (65M60) Finite element, Rayleigh-Ritz and Galerkin methods for boundary value problems involving PDEs (65N30) Computational methods for problems pertaining to biology (92-08) Biophysics (92C05) Physiological flow (92C35) Cell biology (92C37) Nonlinear higher-order PDEs (35G20) Systems of nonlinear higher-order PDEs (35G50) Numerical methods for initial value problems involving ordinary differential equations (65L05)
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Cited In (4)
- Apprehending the effects of mechanical deformations in cardiac electrophysiology: A homogenization approach
- A displacement-based finite element formulation for incompressible and nearly-incompressible cardiac mechanics
- An orthotropic active-strain model for the myocardium mechanics and its numerical approximation
- Isogeometric mixed collocation of nearly-incompressible electromechanics in finite deformations for cardiac muscle simulations
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