Tumor Growth Simulation
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5.2
Reaction Diffusion Equations (RDE) for Modeling
Brain Tumors
In the literature, spatiotemporal models of tumor growth have been exten-
sively employed to simulate the growth of brain gliomas [5–24]. Based on the
Reaction–Diffusion Equation (RDE), these models explain how the pathology
progresses through the tumor cells’ time of proliferation and the space where
they infiltrate into the surrounding tissue. Equation 5.1 and the second Fick’s
law of Kolmogorov-Petrovsky-Piskounov can be used to create the most basic
RDE. Equation 5.2 represents the isotropic version of the formula.
Anisotropic:
dc
dt = ∇. (D(x)∇c) + R(c)
(5.1)
Isotropic:
dc
dt = D(x)∇2c + R (c)
(5.2)
Where D(x) is the spatially resolved diffusion tensor that describes cell
diffusion rate at certain point x in time t, c is the Glioma cell concentration
of the same point x and at the same time t. The function R(c) represents
the proliferation component where it is the temporal evolution pattern of the
growth. Some research [8, 9, 14, 16, 17] tends to include treatment therapy
function T(c) to the equation which makes Equation 5.1 takes the form:
dc
dt = ∇. (D(x)∇c) + R (c) −T(c)
(5.3)
RDE is bounded by some condition where for each point x:
x ∈B
(5.4)
where B is the brain tissue domain
t ≥0
(5.5)
c (x, 0) = c0
(5.6)
where, c0 is initial distribution of tumor cells
n.∇c = 0 on∂B
(5.7)
5.3
Reaction Models
There are numerous ways to express the reaction part, some of them are as
follows [8, 10, 13–18, 20, 21]: