Hyperelastic modelling of the crystalline lens: Accommodation and presbyopia
Author(s) -
Elena Lanchares,
Rafael Navarro,
Begoña Calvo
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of optometry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.844
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 1888-4296
pISSN - 1989-1342
DOI - 10.1016/j.optom.2012.05.006
Subject(s) - presbyopia , accommodation , lens (geology) , hyperelastic material , stiffness , materials science , cortex (anatomy) , optics , finite element method , physics , structural engineering , engineering , neuroscience , composite material , psychology
PurposeThe modification of the mechanical properties of the human crystalline lens with age can be a major cause of presbyopia. Since these properties cannot be measured in vivo, numerical simulation can be used to estimate them. We propose an inverse method to determine age-dependent change in the material properties of the tissues composing the human crystalline lens.MethodsA finite element model of a 30-year-old lens in the accommodated state was developed. The force necessary to achieve full accommodation in a 30-year-old lens of known external geometry was computed using this model. Two additional numerical models of the lens corresponding to the ages of 40 and 50 years were then built. Assuming that the accommodative force applied to the lens remains constant with age, the material properties of nucleus and cortex were estimated by inverse analysis.ResultsThe zonular force necessary to reshape the model of a 30-year-old lens from the accommodated to the unaccommodated geometry was 0.078newton (N). Both nucleus and cortex became stiffer with age. The stiffness of the nucleus increased with age at a higher rate than the cortex.ConclusionsIn agreement with the classical theory of Helmholtz, on which we based our model, our results indicate that a major cause of presbyopia is that both nucleus and cortex become stiffer with age; therefore, a constant value of the zonular forces with aging does not achieve full accommodation, that is, the accommodation capability decreases
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