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1.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 154: 106520, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38569421

RESUMEN

The preparation of slender specimens for in-vitro tissue characterisation could potentially alter mechanical tissue properties. To investigate this factor, rectangular specimens were prepared from the wall of the porcine aorta for uniaxial tensile loading. Varying strip widths of 16 mm, 8 mm, and 4 mm were achieved by excising zero, one, and three cuts within the specimen along the loading direction, respectively. While specimens loaded along the vessel's circumferential direction acquired consistent tissue properties, the width of test specimens influenced the results of axially loaded tissue; vascular wall stiffness was reduced by approximately 40% in specimens with strips 4 mm wide. In addition, the cross-loading stretch was strongly influenced by specimen strip width, and fiber sliding contributed to the softening of slender tensile specimens, an outcome from finite element analysis of test specimens. We may, therefore, conclude that cutting orthogonal to the main direction of collagen fibers introduces mechanical trauma that weakens slender tensile specimens, compromising the determination of representative mechanical vessel wall properties.


Asunto(s)
Aorta , Porcinos , Animales , Resistencia a la Tracción , Análisis de Elementos Finitos , Estrés Mecánico , Fenómenos Biomecánicos
2.
Acta Biomater ; 167: 158-170, 2023 09 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37422007

RESUMEN

The mechanics of vascular tissue, particularly its fracture properties, are crucial in the onset and progression of vascular diseases. Vascular tissue properties are complex, and the identification of fracture mechanical properties relies on robust and efficient numerical tools. In this study, we propose a parameter identification pipeline to extract tissue properties from force-displacement and digital image correlation (DIC) data. The data has been acquired by symconCT testing porcine aorta wall specimens. Vascular tissue is modelled as a non-linear viscoelastic isotropic solid, and an isotropic cohesive zone model describes tissue fracture. The model closely replicated the experimental observations and identified the fracture energies of 1.57±0.82 kJ m-2 and 0.96±0.34 kJ m-2 for rupturing the porcine aortic media along the circumferential and axial directions, respectively. The identified strength was always below 350 kPa, a value significantly lower than identified through classical protocols, such as simple tension, and sheds new light on the resilience of the aorta. Further refinements to the model, such as considering rate effects in the fracture process zone and tissue anisotropy, could have improved the simulation results. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: This paper identified porcine aorta's biomechanical properties using data acquired through a previously developed experimental protocol, the symmetry-constraint compact tension test. An implicit finite element method model mimicked the test, and a two-step approach identified the material's elastic and fracture properties directly from force-displacement curves and digital image correlation-based strain measurements. Our findings show a lower strength of the abdominal aorta as compared to the literature, which may have significant implications for the clinical evaluation of the risk of aortic rupture.


Asunto(s)
Aorta Abdominal , Rotura de la Aorta , Porcinos , Animales , Fenómenos Biomecánicos , Fenómenos Mecánicos , Simulación por Computador , Estrés Mecánico , Análisis de Elementos Finitos
3.
Acta Biomater ; 167: 147-157, 2023 09 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37355178

RESUMEN

Tissue failure and damage are inherent parts of vascular diseases and tightly linked to clinical events. Additionally, experimental set-ups designed to study classical engineering materials are suboptimal in the exploration of vessel wall fracture properties. The classical Compact Tension (CT) test was augmented to enable stable fracture propagation, resulting in the symmetry-constraint Compact Tension (symconCT) test, a suitable set-up for fracture testing of vascular tissue. The test was combined with Digital Image Correlation (DIC) to study tissue fracture in 45 porcine aorta specimens. Test specimens were loaded in axial and circumferential directions in a physiological solution at 37 °C. Loading the aortic vessel wall in the axial direction resulted in mode I tissue failure and a fracture path aligned with the circumferential vessel direction. Circumferential loading resulted in mode I-dominated failure with multiple deflections of the fracture path. The aorta ruptured at a principal Green-Lagrange strain of approximately 0.7, and strain rate peaks that develop ahead of the crack tip reached nearly 400 times the strain rate on average over the test specimen. It required approximately 70% more external work to fracture the aorta by circumferential than axial load; normalised with the fracture surface, similar energy levels are, however, observed. The symconCT test resulted in a stable fracture propagation, which, combined with DIC, provided a set-up for the in-depth analysis of vascular tissue failure. The high strain rates ahead of the crack tip indicate the significance of rate effects in the constitutive description of vascular tissue fracture. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: This paper represents a significant step forward in understanding the fracture properties of porcine aorta. Inspired by the Compact Tension test, we developed an ad hoc experimental protocol to investigate stable crack propagation in soft materials, providing new insights into the mechanical processes that lead to the rupture of vascular tissue. The set-up enables the assessment of strains and strain rates ahead of the crack tip, and our findings could improve the clinical risk assessment of vascular pathologies as well as optimise medical device design.


Asunto(s)
Fracturas Óseas , Animales , Porcinos , Estrés Mecánico , Aorta/diagnóstico por imagen , Ensayo de Materiales
4.
Front Integr Neurosci ; 13: 15, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31156402

RESUMEN

When faced with a novel object, we explore it to understand its shape. This way we combine information coming from different senses, as touch, proprioception and vision, together with the motor information embedded in our motor execution plan. The exploration process provides a structure and constrains this rich flow of inputs, supporting the formation of a unified percept and the memorization of the object features. However, how the exploration strategies are planned is still an open question. In particular, is the exploration strategy used to memorize an object different from the exploration strategy adopted in a recall task? To address this question we used iCube, a sensorized cube which measures its orientation in space and the location of the contacts on its faces. Participants were required to explore the cube faces where little pins were positioned in varying number. Participants had to explore the cube twice and individuate potential differences between the two presentations, which could be performed either haptically alone, or with also vision available. The haptic and visuo-haptic (VH) exploratory strategies changed significantly when finalized to memorize the structure of the object with respect to when the same object was explored to recall and compare it with its memorized instance. These findings indicate that exploratory strategies are adapted not only to the property of the object to be analyzed but also to the prospective use of the resulting representation, be it memorization or recall. The results are discussed in light of the possibility of a systematic modeling of natural VH exploration strategies.

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