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1.
Acta Biomater ; 178: 1-12, 2024 04 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38401775

RESUMO

Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death worldwide and include, among others, critical conditions of the aortic wall. Importantly, such critical conditions require effective diagnosis and treatment, which are not yet accurate enough. However, they could be significantly strengthened with predictive material models of the aortic wall. In particular, such predictive models could support surgical decisions, preoperative planning, and estimation of postoperative tissue remodeling. However, developing a predictive model requires experimental data showing both structural parameters and mechanical behavior. Such experimental data can be obtained using multimodal experiments. This review therefore discusses the current approaches to multimodal experiments. Importantly, the strength of the aortic wall is determined primarily by its passive components, i.e., mainly collagen, elastin, and proteoglycans. Therefore, this review focuses on multimodal experiments that relate the passive mechanical behavior of the human aortic wall to the structure and organization of its passive components. In particular, the multimodal experiments are classified according to the expected results. Multiple examples are provided for each experimental class and summarized with highlighted advantages and disadvantages of the method. Finally, future directions of multimodal experiments are envisioned and evaluated. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Multimodal experiments are innovative approaches that have gained interest very quickly, but also recently. This review presents therefore a first clear summary of groundbreaking research in the field of multimodal experiments. The benefits and limitations of various types of multimodal experiments are thoroughly discussed, and a comprehensive overview of possible results is provided. Although this review focuses on multimodal experiments performed on human aortic tissues, the methods used and described are not limited to human aortic tissues but can be extended to other soft materials.


Assuntos
Aorta , Colágeno , Humanos , Colágeno/química , Estresse Mecânico , Fenômenos Biomecânicos
2.
Acta Biomater ; 173: 167-183, 2024 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37984627

RESUMO

The complex mechanics of the gastric wall facilitates the main digestive tasks of the stomach. However, the interplay between the mechanical properties of the stomach, its microstructure, and its vital functions is not yet fully understood. Importantly, the pig animal model is widely used in biomedical research for preliminary or ethically prohibited studies of the human digestion system. Therefore, this study aims to thoroughly characterize the mechanical behavior and microstructure of the porcine stomach. For this purpose, multiple quasi-static mechanical tests were carried out with three different loading modes, i.e., planar biaxial extension, radial compression, and simple shear. Stress-relaxation tests complemented the quasi-static experiments to evaluate the deformation and strain-dependent viscoelastic properties. Each experiment was conducted on specimens of the complete stomach wall and two separate layers, mucosa and muscularis, from each of the three gastric regions, i.e., fundus, body, and antrum. The significant preconditioning effects and the considerable regional and layer-specific differences in the tissue response were analyzed. Furthermore, the mechanical experiments were complemented with histology to examine the influence of the microstructural composition on the macrostructural mechanical response and vice versa. Importantly, the shear tests showed lower stresses in the complete wall compared to the single layers which the loose network of submucosal collagen might explain. Also, the stratum arrangement of the muscularis might explain mechanical anisotropy during tensile tests. This study shows that gastric tissue is characterized by a highly heterogeneous microstructure with regional variations in layer composition reflecting not only functional differences but also diverse mechanical behavior. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Unfortunately, only few experimental data on gastric tissue are available for an adequate material parameter and model estimation. The present study therefore combines layer- and region-specific stomach wall mechanics obtained under multiple loading conditions with histological insights into the heterogeneous microstructure. On the one hand, the extensive data sets of this study expand our understanding of the interplay between gastric mechanics, motility and functionality, which could help to identify and treat associated pathologies. On the other hand, such data sets are of high relevance for the constitutive modeling of stomach tissue, and its application in the field of medical engineering, e.g., in the development of surgical staplers and the improvement of bariatric surgical interventions.


Assuntos
Colágeno , Estômago , Suínos , Animais , Humanos , Estômago/fisiologia , Modelos Animais , Colágeno/química , Anisotropia , Testes Mecânicos , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Estresse Mecânico
3.
Acta Biomater ; 161: 154-169, 2023 04 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36812954

RESUMO

Among the three layers of the aortic wall, the media is primarily responsible for its mechanical properties, but the adventitia prevents the aorta from overstretching and rupturing. The role of the adventitia is therefore crucial with regard to aortic wall failure, and understanding the load-induced changes in tissue microstructure is of high importance. Specifically, the focus of this study is on the changes in collagen and elastin microstructure in response to macroscopic equibiaxial loading applied to the aortic adventitia. To observe these changes, multi-photon microscopy imaging and biaxial extension tests were performed simultaneously. In particular, microscopy images were recorded at 0.02 stretch intervals. The microstructural changes of collagen fiber bundles and elastin fibers were quantified with the parameters of orientation, dispersion, diameter, and waviness. The results showed that the adventitial collagen was divided from one into two fiber families under equibiaxial loading conditions. The almost diagonal orientation of the adventitial collagen fiber bundles remained unchanged, but the dispersion was substantially reduced. No clear orientation of the adventitial elastin fibers was observed at any stretch level. The waviness of the adventitial collagen fiber bundles decreased under stretch, but the adventitial elastin fibers showed no change. These original findings highlight differences between the medial and adventitial layers and provide insight into the stretching process of the aortic wall. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: To provide accurate and reliable material models, it is essential to understand the mechanical behavior of the material and its microstructure. Such understanding can be enhanced with tracking of the microstructural changes caused by mechanical loading of the tissue. This study provides therefore a unique dataset of structural parameters of the human aortic adventitia obtained under equibiaxial loading. The structural parameters describe orientation, dispersion, diameter, and waviness of collagen fiber bundles and elastin fibers. Eventually, the microstructural changes in the human aortic adventitia are compared with the microstructural changes in the human aortic media from a previous study. This comparison reveals the cutting-edge findings on the differences in the response to the loading between these two human aortic layers.


Assuntos
Túnica Adventícia , Elastina , Humanos , Elastina/química , Microscopia , Aorta , Colágeno , Estresse Mecânico , Fenômenos Biomecânicos
4.
Acta Biomater ; 151: 396-413, 2022 10 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35970481

RESUMO

Understanding the correlation between tissue architecture, health status, and mechanical properties is essential for improving material models and developing tissue engineering scaffolds. Since structural-based material models are state of the art, there is an urgent need for experimentally obtained structural parameters. For this purpose, the medial layer of nine human abdominal aortas was simultaneously subjected to equibiaxial loading and multi-photon microscopy. At each loading interval of 0.02, collagen and elastin fibers were imaged based on their second-harmonic generation signal and two-photon excited autofluorescence, respectively. The structural alterations in the fibers were quantified using the parameters of orientation, diameter, and waviness. The results of the mechanical tests divided the sample cohort into the ruptured and non-ruptured, and stiff and non-stiff groups, which were covered by the findings from histological investigations. The alterations in structural parameters provided an explanation for the observed mechanical behavior. In addition, the waviness parameters of both collagen and elastin fibers showed the potential to serve as indicators of tissue strength. The data provided address deficiencies in current material models and bridge multiscale mechanisms in the aortic media. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Available material models can reproduce, but cannot predict, the mechanical behavior of human aortas. This deficiency could be overcome with the help of experimentally validated structural parameters as provided in this study. Simultaneous multi-photon microscopy and biaxial extension testing revealed the microstructure of human aortic media at different stretch levels. Changes in the arrangement of collagen and elastin fibers were quantified using structural parameters such as orientation, diameter and waviness. For the first time, structural parameters of human aortic tissue under continuous loading conditions have been obtained. In particular, the waviness parameters at the reference configuration have been associated with tissue stiffness, brittleness, and the onset of atherosclerosis.


Assuntos
Elastina , Microscopia , Aorta Abdominal/patologia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Colágeno/química , Elastina/química , Humanos , Estresse Mecânico , Túnica Média
5.
Microsc Microanal ; : 1-15, 2022 May 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35545876

RESUMO

Collagen plays a key role in the strength of aortic walls, so studying micro-structural changes during disease development is critical to better understand collagen reorganization. Second-harmonic generation microscopy is used to obtain images of human aortic collagen in both healthy and diseased states. Methods are being developed in order to efficiently determine the waviness, that is, tortuosity and amplitude, as well as the diameter, orientation, and dispersion of collagen fibers, and bundles in healthy and aneurysmal tissues. The results show layer-specific differences in the collagen of healthy tissues, which decrease in samples of aneurysmal aortic walls. In healthy tissues, the thick collagen bundles of the adventitia are characterized by greater waviness, both in the tortuosity and in the amplitude, compared to the relatively thin and straighter collagen fibers of the media. In contrast, most aneurysmal tissues tend to have a more uniform structure of the aortic wall with no significant difference in collagen diameter between the luminal and abluminal layers. An increase in collagen tortuosity compared to the healthy media is also observed in the aneurysmal luminal layer. The data set provided can help improve related material and multiscale models of aortic walls and aneurysm formation.

6.
Acta Biomater ; 141: 300-314, 2022 03 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35065266

RESUMO

An insight into changes of soft biological tissue ultrastructures under loading conditions is essential to understand their response to mechanical stimuli. Therefore, this study offers an approach to investigate the arrangement of collagen fibrils and proteoglycans (PGs), which are located within the mechanically loaded aortic wall. The human aortic samples were either fixed directly with glutaraldehyde in the load-free state or subjected to a planar biaxial extension test prior to fixation. The aortic ultrastructure was recorded using electron tomography. Collagen fibrils and PGs were segmented using convolutional neural networks, particularly the ESPNet model. The 3D ultrastructural reconstructions revealed a complex organization of collagen fibrils and PGs. In particular, we observed that not all PGs are attached to the collagen fibrils, but some fill the spaces between the fibrils with a clear distance to the collagen. The complex organization cannot be fully captured or can be severely misinterpreted in 2D. The approach developed opens up practical possibilities, including the quantification of the spatial relationship between collagen fibrils and PGs as a function of the mechanical load. Such quantification can also be used to compare tissues under different conditions, e.g., healthy and diseased, to improve or develop new material models. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: The developed approach enables the 3D reconstruction of collagen fibrils and proteoglycans as they are embedded in the loaded human aortic wall. This methodological pipeline comprises the knowledge of arterial mechanics, imaging with transmission electron microscopy and electron tomography, segmentation of 3D image data sets with convolutional neural networks and finally offers a unique insight into the ultrastructural changes in the aortic tissue caused by mechanical stimuli.


Assuntos
Imageamento Tridimensional , Proteoglicanas , Colágeno/ultraestrutura , Matriz Extracelular , Humanos , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão
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