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Corneal cross-linking (CXL) has been proved efficiency for treating progressive keratoconus and other corneal ectasia diseases by stabilizing corneal geometry and biomechanics. However, the necessity of repeated CXL treatment in patients is unknown. This study aimed to investigate corneal biomechanical stiffness and change in corneal histopathological characteristics after repeated accelerated CXL (A-CXL) in cat eyes. A-CXL was performed with 0.1% riboflavin applied for 10 min, followed by ultraviolet A irradiation at 30 mW/cm2 for 3 min at 365 nm in 15 domestic cats. Corneas (n = 30) were divided into three groups: one-time accelerated corneal cross-linking (A-CXL*1 group), repeated accelerated corneal cross-linking (A-CXL*2 group), and an untreated control group. In A-CXL*2 group, A-CXL was repeated at 1-month intervals. In vivo ocular examinations were performed pre- and postoperatively. Biomechanical analysis was performed using a biotester biaxial testing system. We used the Mooney-Rivlin strain-energy function to describe corneal material properties. No infection in any case after A-CXL was observed. Biomechanical tests showed that the stress-strain curves of the two A-CXL groups were significantly different from those of the control group (P < 0.01), whereas stress-strain curve of the A-CXL*2 group was similar to that of the A-CXL*1 group (P > 0.05). Delayed epithelial healing and haze were observed 1 month after surgery. Stromal demarcation line depth measured with anterior spectral-domain optical coherence tomography was 187.6 ± 20.4 and 197.1 ± 11.5 µm for the A-CXL*1 and A-CXL*2 groups, respectively (P > 0.05). These results show that A-CXL can increase corneal biomechanics in cat eyes. The biomechanical enhancement of cat corneas treated with repeated A-CXL at 1-month intervals was similar to that of performing a one-time A-CXL. Repeated cross-linking procedures at short intervals may increase the risk of adverse reactions, and more caution should be taken in clinical applications.
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Ceratocone , Fármacos Fotossensibilizantes , Animais , Gatos , Fármacos Fotossensibilizantes/uso terapêutico , Crosslinking Corneano , Substância Própria/patologia , Colágeno/uso terapêutico , Reagentes de Ligações Cruzadas/uso terapêutico , Córnea/patologia , Riboflavina/farmacologia , Riboflavina/uso terapêutico , Raios Ultravioleta , Ceratocone/tratamento farmacológico , Ceratocone/patologia , Topografia da CórneaRESUMO
MAIN CONCLUSION: Cell wall swelling, fracture mode (along the middle lamellae vs. across cell walls), stiffness, and pressure at fracture of the sweet cherry fruit skin are closely related. Skin cracking is a common phenomenon in many crops bearing fleshy fruit. The objectives were to investigate relationships between the mode of fracture, the extent of cell wall swelling, and the mechanical properties of the fruit skin using sweet cherry (Prunus avium) as a model. Cracking was induced by incubating whole fruit in deionised water or by fracturing exocarp segments (ESs) in biaxial tensile tests. The fracture mode of epidermal cells was investigated by light microscopy. In biaxial tensile tests, the anticlinal cell walls of the ES fractured predominantly across the cell walls (rather than along) and showed no cell wall swelling. In contrast, fruit incubated in water fractured predominantly along the anticlinal epidermal cell walls and the cell walls were swollen. Swelling of cell walls also occurred when ESs were incubated in malic acid, in hypertonic solutions of sucrose, or in water. Compared to the untreated controls, these treatments resulted in more frequent fractures along the cell walls, lower pressures at fracture (p fracture), and lower moduli of elasticity (E, i.e., less stiff). Conversely, compared to the untreated controls, incubating the ES in CaCl2 and in high concentrations of ethanol resulted in thinner cell walls, in less frequent fractures along the cell walls, higher E and p fracture. Our study demonstrates that fracture mode, stiffness, and pressure at fracture are closely related to cell wall swelling. A number of other factors, including cultivar, ripening stage, turgor, CaCl2, and malic acid, exert their effects only indirectly, i.e., by affecting cell wall swelling.
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Parede Celular/fisiologia , Frutas/fisiologia , Prunus avium/fisiologia , Parede Celular/ultraestrutura , Frutas/ultraestrutura , Microscopia , Resistência à TraçãoRESUMO
Continuum mechanics-based finite element models of the shoulder aim to quantify the mechanical environment of the joint to aid in clinical decision-making for rotator cuff injury and disease. These models allow for the evaluation of the internal loading of the shoulder, which cannot be measured in-vivo. This study uses human cadaveric rotator cuff samples with surface tendon strain estimates, to validate a heterogeneous finite element model of the supraspinatus-infraspinatus complex during various load configurations. The computational model was considered validated when the absolute difference in average maximum principal strain for the articular and bursal sides for each load condition estimated by the model was no greater than 3% compared to that measured in the biomechanical study. The model can predict the strains for varying infraspinatus loads allowing for the study of load sharing between these two tightly coordinated tendons. The future goal is to use the modularity of this validated model to study the initiation and propagation of rotator cuff tear and other rotator cuff pathologies to ultimately improve care for rotator cuff tear patients.
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Lesões do Manguito Rotador , Articulação do Ombro , Humanos , Manguito Rotador , Análise de Elementos Finitos , Fenômenos BiomecânicosRESUMO
In order to improve predictive capabilities of numerical simulations, Yld2000-2D yield criterion is used to model the plastic anisotropic behaviors of AA5086 sheets. The parameters of Yld2000-2D yield criterion are identified based on the traditional testing strategy and the inverse identification strategy, respectively. The traditional testing strategy considers uniaxial and equi-biaxial tensile tests. The inverse identification strategy relies on the finite element model update (FEMU) method that couples with a biaxial tensile test using a dedicated cruciform specimen or the Pottier bulging test. The identified parameters are preliminarily evaluated by comparing predicted and experimental yield stresses, r-values, and yield loci. Then, the deep drawing test and simulations are performed. The identified parameter sets of Yld2000-2D yield criterion are further evaluated in terms of practical forming by comparing the predicted earing profile height with the experimental results. The results show that the inverse identification strategy can be an effective alternative to identify the parameters of Yld2000-2D yield criterion, and a well-designed heterogeneous test could lead to a better identification result.
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Stress uniformity within the gauge zone of a cruciform specimen significantly affects materials' in-plane biaxial mechanical properties in material testing. The stress uniformity depends on the load transmission of the cruciform specimen from the fixtures to the gauge zone. Previous studies failed to alter the nature of the load transmission of the geometric features using parametric optimisations. To improve stress uniformity in the gauge zone, we optimised the cross-arms to design a centre-reduced cruciform specimen with topology and shape optimisations. The simulations show that the optimised specimen obtains significantly less stress variation and range in the gauge zone than the optimised specimen under different observed areas, directions, and load ratios of von Mises, S11, S22, and S12. In the quantified gauge zone, a more uniform stress distribution could be generated by optimizing specimen geometry, whose value should be estimated indirectly each time through simulations. We found that topology and shape optimisations could markedly improve stress uniformity in the gauge zone, and stress concentration at the cross-arms intersection. We first optimised the cruciform specimen structure by combining topology and shape optimisations, which provided a cost-effective way to improve stress uniformity in the gauge zone and reduce stress concentration at the cross-arms intersection, helping obtain reliable data to perform large strains in the in-plane biaxial tensile test.
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Ascending aortic aneurysm (AsAA) is a high-risk cardiovascular disease with an increased incidence over years. In this study, we compared different risk factors based on the pre-failure behavior (from a biomechanical point of view) obtained ex-vivo from an equi-biaxial tensile test. A total of 100 patients (63 ± 12 years, 72 males) with AsAA replacement, were recruited. Equi-biaxial tensile tests of AsAA walls were performed on freshly sampled aortic wall tissue after ascending aortic replacement. The aneurysmal aortic walls were divided into four quadrants (medial, anterior, lateral, and posterior) and two directions (longitudinal and circumferential) were considered. The stiffness was represented by the maximum Young modulus (MYM). Based on patient information, the following subgroups were considered: age, gender, hypertension, obesity, dyslipidemia, diabetes, smoking history, aortic insufficiency, aortic stenosis, coronary artery disease, aortic diameter and aortic valve type. In general, when the aortic diameter increased, the aortic wall became thicker. In terms of the MYM, the longitudinal direction was significantly higher than that in the circumferential direction. In the multivariant analysis, the impact factors of age (p = 0.07), smoking (p = 0.05), diabetes (p = 0.03), aortic stenosis (p = 0.02), coronary artery disease (p < 10-3), and aortic diameters (p = 0.02) were significantly influencing the MYM. There was no significant MYM difference when the patients presented arterial hypertension, dyslipidemia, obesity, or bicuspid aortic valve. To conclude, the pre-failure aortic stiffness is multi-factorial, according to our population of 100 patients with AsAA. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Our research on the topic of "Aortic local biomechanical properties in case of ascending aortic aneurysms" is about the biomechanical properties on one hundred aortic samples according to the aortic wall quadrants and the direction. More than ten factors and risks which may impact ascending aortic aneurysms have been studied. According to our knowledge, so far, this article involved the largest population on this topic. It will be our pleasure to share this information with all the readers.
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Aneurisma da Aorta Torácica , Aneurisma Aórtico , Estenose da Valva Aórtica , Diabetes Mellitus , Hipertensão , Aorta , Aneurisma Aórtico/etiologia , Valva Aórtica , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Humanos , Masculino , ObesidadeRESUMO
Mechanical characteristics of both the healthy ascending aorta and acute type A aortic dissection were investigated using in vitro biaxial tensile tests, in vivo measurements via transoesophageal echocardiography and histological characterisations. This combination of analysis at tissular, structural and microstructural levels highlighted the following: (i) a linear mechanical response for the dissected intimomedial flap and, conversely, nonlinear behaviour for both healthy and dissected ascending aorta; all showed anisotropy; (ii) a stiffer mechanical response in the longitudinal than in the circumferential direction for the healthy ascending aorta, consistent with the histological quantification of collagen and elastin fibre density; (iii) a link between dissection and ascending aorta stiffening, as revealed by biaxial tensile tests. This result was corroborated by in vivo measurements with stiffness index, ß, and Peterson modulus, Ep, higher for patients with dissection than for control patients. It was consistent with histological analysis on dissected samples showing elastin fibre dislocations, reduced elastin density and increased collagen density. To our knowledge, this is the first study to report biaxial tensile tests on the dissected intimomedial flap and in vivo stiffness measurements of acute type A dissection in humans.
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Aorta/fisiologia , Aneurisma Aórtico/fisiopatologia , Dissecção Aórtica/fisiopatologia , Idoso , Dissecção Aórtica/patologia , Anisotropia , Aorta/anatomia & histologia , Aneurisma Aórtico/patologia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Colágeno , Ecocardiografia Transesofagiana , Elastina , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estresse Mecânico , Resistência à TraçãoRESUMO
A biaxial tensile testing method has been used to get macroscopic information on elastoplastic deformation of a thin steel specimen and improve the accuracy of plastic processing of steel materials. We newly developed a biaxial tensile testing machine for pulsed neutron experiments (BTM-NEU) to provide the microscopic crystallographic information of steel materials under biaxial load and correlate it with the macroscopic mechanical properties of the materials. The performance of the BTM-NEU was experimentally evaluated with cold-rolled mild steel and hot-rolled high-tensile-strength steel materials and compared with that of a standard biaxial tensile testing machine (BTM-std) as follows. â¢The BTM-NEU can test an ISO-standardized cruciform specimen as the BTM-std and its performance is equivalent to that of the BTM-std.â¢The BTM-NEU has excellent long-time reliability and stability necessary for pulsed neutron experiments, especially Bragg-edge neutron imaging experiments.â¢The BTM-NEU can be applied to pulsed neutron experiments using a Bragg-edge imaging method.
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One of the aims of this work is to develop an original custom built biaxial set-up to assess mechanical behavior of soft tissues. Stretch controlled biaxial tensile tests are performed and stereoscopic digital image correlation (SDIC) is implemented to measure the 3D components of the generated displacements. Using this experimental device, the main goal is to investigate the mechanical behavior of porcine ascending aorta in the more general context of human ascending aorta pathologies. The results highlight that (i) SDIC arrangement allows accurate assessment of displacements and so stress strain curves, (ii) porcine ascending aorta has a nearly linear and anisotropic mechanical behavior until 30% of strain, (iii) porcine ascending aorta is stiffer in the circumferential direction than in the longitudinal one, (iv) the material coefficient representing the interaction between the two loading directions is thickness dependent, (v) taking into account the variability of the samples the stress values are independent of the stretch rate in the range of values from 10(-3) to 10(-1)s(-1) and finally, (vi) unlike other segments of the aorta, 4-month-old pigs ascending aorta is definitely not a relevant model to investigate the mechanical behavior of the human ascending aorta.
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Aorta/fisiologia , Animais , Anisotropia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Estresse Mecânico , Suínos , Resistência à TraçãoRESUMO
An aortic aneurysm is a lethal arterial disease that mainly occurs in the thoracic and abdominal regions of the aorta. Thoracic aortic aneurysms are prevalent in the root/ascending parts of the aorta and can lead to aortic rupture resulting in the sudden death of patients. Understanding the biomechanical and histopathological changes associated with ascending thoracic aortic aneurysms (ATAAs), this study investigates the mechanical properties of the aorta during strip-biaxial tensile cycles. The loss factor-defined as the ratio of dissipated energy to the energy absorbed during a tensile cycle-the incremental modulus, and their anisotropy indexes were compared with the media fiber compositions for aneurysmal (n = 26) and control (n = 4) human ascending aortas. The aneurysmal aortas were categorized into the aortas with bicuspid aortic valves (BAV) and tricuspid aortic valves (TAV). The strip-biaxial loss factor correlates well with the diameter of the aortas with BAV and TAV (for the axial direction, respectively, R² = 0.71, p = 0.0022 and R² = 0.54, p = 0.0096). The loss factor increases significantly with patients' age in the BAV group (for the axial direction: R² = 0.45, p = 0.0164). The loss factor is isotropic for all TAV quadrants, whereas it is on average only isotropic in the anterior and outer curvature regions of the BAV group. The results suggest that loss factor may be a useful surrogate measure to describe the histopathology of aneurysmal tissue and to demonstrate the differences between ATAAs with the BAV and TAV.
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Transcatheter heart valve replacement is an attractive and promising technique for congenital as well as acquired heart valve disease. In this procedure, the replacement valve is mounted in a stent that is expanded at the aimed valve position and fixated by clamping. However, for this technique to be appropriate for pediatric patients, the material properties of the host tissue need to be determined to design stents that can be optimized for this particular application. In this study we performed equibiaxial tensile tests on four adult ovine pulmonary artery walls and compared the outcomes with one pediatric pulmonary artery. Results show that the pediatric pulmonary artery was significantly thinner (1.06 ± 0.36 mm (mean ± SD)) than ovine tissue (2.85 ± 0.40 mm), considerably stiffer for strain values that exceed the physiological conditions (beyond 50% strain in the circumferential and 60% in the longitudinal direction), more anisotropic (with a significant difference in stiffness between the longitudinal and circumferential directions beyond 60% strain) and presented stronger non-linear stress-strain behavior at equivalent strains (beyond 26% strain) compared to ovine tissue. These discrepancies suggest that stents validated and optimized using the ovine pre-clinical model might not perform satisfactorily in pediatric patients. The material parameters derived from this study may be used to develop stent designs for both applications using computational models.
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Elasticidade , Próteses Valvulares Cardíacas , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Desenho de Prótese , Artéria Pulmonar/fisiologia , Stents , Adulto , Animais , Pré-Escolar , Humanos , Ovinos , Resistência à TraçãoRESUMO
A preoperative simulation of soft tissue deformations during plastic and reconstructive surgery is desirable to support the surgeon's planning and to improve surgical outcomes. The current development of constitutive adipose tissue models, for the implementation in multilayer computational frameworks for the simulation of human soft tissue deformations, has proved difficult because knowledge of the required mechanical parameters of fat tissue is limited. Therefore, for the first time, human abdominal adipose tissues were mechanically investigated by biaxial tensile and triaxial shear tests. The results of this study suggest that human abdominal adipose tissues under quasi-static and dynamic multiaxial loadings can be characterized as a nonlinear, anisotropic and viscoelastic soft biological material. The nonlinear and anisotropic features are consequences of the material's collagenous microstructure. The aligned collagenous septa observed in histological investigations causes the anisotropy of the tissue. A hyperelastic model used in this study was appropriate to represent the quasi-static multiaxial mechanical behavior of fat tissue. The constitutive parameters are intended to serve as a basis for soft tissue simulations using the finite element method, which is an apparent method for obtaining promising results in the field of plastic and reconstructive surgery.