A single cell-based model of the ductal tumour microarchitecture
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2373336
Recommendations
- A 2D mechanistic model of breast ductal carcinoma \textit{in situ} (DCIS) morphology and progression
- Mathematical modelling of comedo ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast
- Modelling the early growth of ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast
- Patient-calibrated agent-based modelling of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS): from microscopic measurements to macroscopic predictions of clinical progression
- A quantitative theoretical model for the development of malignancy in ductal carcinoma \textit{in situ}
Cited in
(19)- A 2D mechanistic model of breast ductal carcinoma \textit{in situ} (DCIS) morphology and progression
- Numerical analysis of the immersed boundary method for cell-based simulation
- Mathematical model of macrophage-facilitated breast cancer cells invasion
- An immersed boundary framework for modelling the growth of individual cells: an application to the early tumour development
- An immersed boundary method for a contractile elastic ring in a three-dimensional Newtonian fluid
- A multiscale model for heterogeneous tumor spheroid in vitro
- A single-cell approach in modeling the dynamics of tumor microregions
- A computational study of the development of epithelial acini. I: Sufficient conditions for the formation of a hollow structure
- Simulating flexible fiber suspensions using a scalable immersed boundary algorithm
- Study of architectural forms of invasive carcinoma based on the measurement of pattern complexity
- Modelling the early growth of ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast
- A 3D motile rod-shaped monotrichous bacterial model
- Comparison of drug inhibitory effects \((\mathrm{IC}_{50})\) in monolayer and spheroid cultures
- Microenvironment driven invasion: a multiscale multimodel investigation
- A computational study of the development of epithelial acini. II: Necessary conditions for structure and lumen stability
- Patient-calibrated agent-based modelling of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS): from microscopic measurements to macroscopic predictions of clinical progression
- Modelling of cancer growth, evolution and invasion: bridging scales and models
- Selected aspects of avascular tumor growth reproduced by a hybrid model of cell dynamics and chemical kinetics
- Tumor growth and calcification in evolving microenvironmental geometries
This page was built for publication: A single cell-based model of the ductal tumour microarchitecture
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q2373336)