Practical identifiability analysis of a minimal cardiovascular system model

Type of content
Journal Article
Thesis discipline
Degree name
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Language
English
Date
2019
Authors
Pironet, A.
Docherty, P.D.
Dauby, P.C.
Chase, Geoff
Desaive, T.
Abstract

© 2017 Elsevier B.V. Background and objective: Parameters of mathematical models of the cardiovascular system can be used to monitor cardiovascular state, such as total stressed blood volume status, vessel elastance and resistance. To do so, the model parameters have to be estimated from data collected at the patient's bedside. This work considers a seven-parameter model of the cardiovascular system and investigates whether these parameters can be uniquely determined using indices derived from measurements of arterial and venous pressures, and stroke volume. Methods: An error vector defined the residuals between the simulated and reference values of the seven clinically available haemodynamic indices. The sensitivity of this error vector to each model parameter was analysed, as well as the collinearity between parameters. To assess practical identifiability of the model parameters, profile-likelihood curves were constructed for each parameter. Results: Four of the seven model parameters were found to be practically identifiable from the selected data. The remaining three parameters were practically non-identifiable. Among these non-identifiable parameters, one could be decreased as much as possible. The other two non-identifiable parameters were inversely correlated, which prevented their precise estimation. Conclusions: This work presented the practical identifiability analysis of a seven-parameter cardiovascular system model, from limited clinical data. The analysis showed that three of the seven parameters were practically non-identifiable, thus limiting the use of the model as a monitoring tool. Slight changes in the time-varying function modeling cardiac contraction and use of larger values for the reference range of venous pressure made the model fully practically identifiable.

Description
Citation
Pironet A, Docherty PD, Dauby PC, Chase JG, Desaive T (2019). Practical identifiability analysis of a minimal cardiovascular system model. Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine. 171. 53-65.
Keywords
Practical identifiability, Cardiovascular system, Mathematical model, Parameter identification
Ngā upoko tukutuku/Māori subject headings
ANZSRC fields of research
Fields of Research::32 - Biomedical and clinical sciences::3201 - Cardiovascular medicine and haematology::320101 - Cardiology (incl. cardiovascular diseases)
Fields of Research::40 - Engineering::4017 - Mechanical engineering::401706 - Numerical modelling and mechanical characterisation
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