4.3 Article

Quantifying the mechanical properties of human skin to optimise future microneedle device design

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10255842.2011.596481

Keywords

microneedle; human skin; finite element analysis; inverse methods; Ogden model of hyperelasticity; multilayer

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Microneedle devices are a promising minimally invasive means of delivering drugs/vaccines across or into the skin. However, there is currently a diversity of microneedle designs and application methods that have, primarily, been intuitively developed by the research community. To enable the rational design of optimised microneedle devices, a greater understanding of human skin biomechanics under small deformations is required. This study aims to develop a representative stratified model of human skin, informed by in vivo data. A multilayer finite element model incorporating the epidermis, dermis and hypodermis was established. This was correlated with a series of in-vivo indentation measurements, and the Ogden material coefficients were optimised using a material parameter extraction algorithm. The finite element simulation was subsequently used to model microneedle application to human skin before penetration and was validated by comparing these predictions with the in-vivo measurements. Our model has provided an excellent tool to predict micronscale human skin deformation in vivo and is currently being used to inform optimised microneedle designs.

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