RESUMO
Deviation of blood flow from an optimal range is known to be associated with the initiation and progression of vascular pathologies. Important open questions remain about how the abnormal flow drives specific wall changes in pathologies such as cerebral aneurysms where the flow is highly heterogeneous and complex. This knowledge gap precludes the clinical use of readily available flow data to predict outcomes and improve treatment of these diseases. As both flow and the pathological wall changes are spatially heterogeneous, a crucial requirement for progress in this area is a methodology for acquiring and comapping local vascular wall biology data with local hemodynamic data. Here, we developed an imaging pipeline to address this pressing need. A protocol that employs scanning multiphoton microscopy was developed to obtain three-dimensional (3D) datasets for smooth muscle actin, collagen, and elastin in intact vascular specimens. A cluster analysis was introduced to objectively categorize the smooth muscle cells (SMC) across the vascular specimen based on SMC actin density. Finally, direct quantitative comparison of local flow and wall biology in 3D intact specimens was achieved by comapping both heterogeneous SMC data and wall thickness to patient-specific hemodynamic results.
Assuntos
Matriz Extracelular , Hemodinâmica , Microscopia de Fluorescência por Excitação Multifotônica , Microscopia de Fluorescência por Excitação Multifotônica/métodos , Miócitos de Músculo Liso/fisiologia , Miócitos de Músculo Liso/citologia , Actinas/metabolismo , Animais , Colágeno/metabolismo , Humanos , Elastina/metabolismo , Elastina/análise , Imageamento Tridimensional/métodos , ArtériasRESUMO
Compliance mismatch between the graft and the host artery of an end-to-side (ETS) arterial bypass graft anastomosis increases the intramural stress in the ETS graft-artery junction, and thus may compromise its long-term patency. The present study takes into account the effects of collagen fibers to demonstrate how their orientations alter the stresses. The stresses in an ETS bypass graft anastomosis, as a man-made bifurcation, are compared to those of its natural counterpart with different fiber orientations. Both of the ETS bypass graft anastomosis and its natural counterpart have identical geometric and material models and only their collagen fiber orientations are different. The results indicate that the fiber orientation mismatch between the graft and the host artery may increase the stresses at both the heel and toe regions of the ETS anastomosis (the maximum principal stress at the heel and toe regions increased by 72% and 12%, respectively). Our observations, thus, propose that the mismatch between the collagen fiber orientations of the graft and the host artery, independent of the effect of the suture line, may induce aberrant stresses to the anastomosis of the bypass graft.
Assuntos
Prótese Vascular , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Anastomose Cirúrgica , Velocidade do Fluxo Sanguíneo , Artéria FemoralRESUMO
Vascular calcification is implicated as an important factor in major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), including heart attack and stroke. A controversy remains over how to integrate the diverse forms of vascular calcification into clinical risk assessment tools. Even the commonly used calcium score for coronary arteries, which assumes risk scales positively with total calcification, has important inconsistencies. Fundamental studies are needed to determine how risk is influenced by the diverse calcification phenotypes. However, studies of these kinds are hindered by the lack of high-throughput, objective, and non-destructive tools for classifying calcification in imaging data sets. Here, we introduce a new classification system for phenotyping calcification along with a semi-automated, non-destructive pipeline that can distinguish these phenotypes in even atherosclerotic tissues. The pipeline includes a deep-learning-based framework for segmenting lipid pools in noisy µ-CT images and an unsupervised clustering framework for categorizing calcification based on size, clustering, and topology. This approach is illustrated for five vascular specimens, providing phenotyping for thousands of calcification particles across as many as 3200 images in less than seven hours. Average Dice Similarity Coefficients of 0.96 and 0.87 could be achieved for tissue and lipid pool, respectively, with training and validation needed on only 13 images despite the high heterogeneity in these tissues. By introducing an efficient and comprehensive approach to phenotyping calcification, this work enables large-scale studies to identify a more reliable indicator of the risk of cardiovascular events, a leading cause of global mortality and morbidity.
RESUMO
Deviation of blood flow from an optimal range is known to be associated with the initiation and progression of vascular pathologies. Important open questions remain about how the abnormal flow drives specific wall changes in pathologies such as cerebral aneurysms where the flow is highly heterogeneous and complex. This knowledge gap precludes the clinical use of readily available flow data to predict outcomes and improve treatment of these diseases. As both flow and the pathological wall changes are spatially heterogeneous, a crucial requirement for progress in this area is a methodology for co-mapping local data from vascular wall biology with local hemodynamic data. In this study, we developed an imaging pipeline to address this pressing need. A protocol that employs scanning multiphoton microscopy was designed to obtain 3D data sets for smooth muscle actin, collagen and elastin in intact vascular specimens. A cluster analysis was developed to objectively categorize the smooth muscle cells (SMC) across the vascular specimen based on SMC density. In the final step in this pipeline, the location specific categorization of SMC, along with wall thickness was co-mapped with patient specific hemodynamic results, enabling direct quantitative comparison of local flow and wall biology in 3D intact specimens.
RESUMO
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is a vital mechanical circulatory support modality capable of restoring perfusion for the patient in circulatory failure. Despite increasing adoption of ECMO, there is incomplete understanding of its effects on systemic hemodynamics and how the vasculature responds to varying levels of continuous retrograde perfusion. To gain further insight into the complex ECMO:failing heart circulation, computational fluid dynamics simulations focused on perfusion distribution and hemodynamic flow patterns were conducted using a patient-derived aorta geometry. Three case scenarios were simulated: (1) healthy control; (2) 90% ECMO-derived perfusion to model profound heart failure; and, (3) 50% ECMO-derived perfusion to model the recovering heart. Fluid-structure interface simulations were performed to quantify systemic pressure and vascular deformation throughout the aorta over the cardiac cycle. ECMO support alters pressure distribution while decreasing shear stress. Insights derived from computational modeling may lead to better understanding of ECMO support and improved patient outcomes.