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1.
J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol ; 34(4): 880-887, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36682068

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Esophageal injury is a well-known complication associated with catheter ablation. Though novel methods to mitigate esophageal injury have been developed, few studies have evaluated temperature gradients with catheter ablation across the posterior wall of the left atrium, interstitium, and esophagus. METHODS: To investigate temperature gradients across the tissue, we developed a porcine heart-esophageal model to perform ex vivo catheter ablation on the posterior wall of the left atrium (LA), with juxtaposed interstitial tissue and esophagus. Circulating saline (5 L/min) was used to mimic blood flow along the LA and alteration of ionic content to modulate impedance. Thermistors along the region of interest were used to analyze temperature gradients. Varying time and power, radiofrequency (RF) ablation lesions were applied with an externally irrigated ablation catheter. Ablation strategies were divided into standard approaches (SAs, 10-15 g, 25-35 W, 30 s) or high-power short duration (HPSD, 10-15 g, 40-50 W, 10 s). Temperature gradients, time to the maximum measured temperature, and the relationship between measured temperature as a function of distance from the site of ablation was analyzed. RESULTS: In total, five experiments were conducted each utilizing new porcine posterior LA wall-esophageal specimens for RF ablation (n = 60 lesions each for SA and HPSD). For both SA and HPSD, maximum temperature rise from baseline was markedly higher at the anterior wall (AW) of the esophagus compared to the esophageal lumen (SA: 4.29°C vs. 0.41°C, p < .0001 and HPSD: 3.13°C vs. 0.28°C, p < .0001). Across ablation strategies, the average temperature rise at the AW of the esophagus was significantly higher with SA relative to HPSD ablation (4.29°C vs. 3.13°C, p = .01). From the start of ablation, the average time to reach a maximum temperature as measured at the AW of the esophagus with SA was 36.49 ± 12.12 s, compared to 16.57 ± 4.54 s with HPSD ablation, p < .0001. Fit to a linear scale, a 0.37°C drop in temperature was seen for every 1 cm increase in distance from the site of ablation and thermistor location at the AW of the esophagus. CONCLUSION: Both SA and HPSD ablation strategies resulted in markedly higher temperatures measured at the AW of the esophagus compared to the esophageal lumen, raising concern about the value of clinical intraluminal temperature monitoring. The temperature rise at the AW was lower with HPSD. A significant time delay was seen to reach the maximum measured temperature and a modest increase in distance between the site of ablation and thermistor location impacted the accuracy of monitored temperatures.


Assuntos
Fibrilação Atrial , Ablação por Cateter , Animais , Suínos , Temperatura , Fibrilação Atrial/cirurgia , Átrios do Coração , Esôfago/lesões , Ablação por Cateter/métodos
3.
Surg Endosc ; 35(8): 4539-4549, 2021 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32909208

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Reprocessed devices must be thoroughly cleaned prior to sterilization to ensure efficacy of sterilization agents. Many single-use devices are not designed to be thoroughly cleaned. Interlocking design features inherent to LigaSure™ vessel sealing devices may prevent thorough cleaning and promote accumulation of human tissue that cannot be removed. Thus, the aim of this study was to compare industry reprocessed and new LigaSure™ vessel sealing devices for organic material. METHODS: A total of 168, 84 new and 84 reprocessed, vessel sealing devices were disassembled and inspected for the presence of residual organic matter using visual, microscopic, and chemical analysis. Devices were randomized and test conductors blinded to group membership. Devices were aseptically disassembled and sent through visual inspection. Next, devices were either examined using light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) or exposed to a solution that luminesces in the presence of hemoglobin. Additionally, 165 reprocessed devices were sent to a 3rd party lab for sterility testing via direct immersion culture for 14 days. RESULTS: Significant amounts of remnant organic material (C, N, O, S, Na, P) were observed with 81/84 reprocessed and 0/84 new devices failing inspection protocols. When tested for the presence of hemoglobin, only 1/12 reprocessed devices passed inspection. SEM of reprocessed devices revealed residues with liquid patterns and diffuse soiling with foreign material. Sterility testing of reprocessed devices revealed a sterility level < 6-3. CONCLUSIONS: The abundance of material resembling human tissue observed on reprocessed VSDs suggests inadequate cleaning prior to sterilization. Atomic and morphological analyses of the remnant materials suggest that bacterial biofilms could also be present. Additionally, surface degradation and release of reinforcing glass fibers from the device were observed. Devices designed for single use can harbor significant amounts of remnant material that likely interfere with the sterilization process.


Assuntos
Reutilização de Equipamento , Esterilização , Humanos , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura , Instrumentos Cirúrgicos
4.
Respir Care ; 65(8): 1094-1103, 2020 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32712582

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic is creating ventilator shortages in many countries that is sparking a conversation about placing multiple patients on a single ventilator. However, on March 26, 2020, six leading medical organizations released a joint statement warning clinicians that attempting this technique could lead to poor outcomes and high mortality. Nevertheless, hospitals around the United States and abroad are considering this technique out of desperation (eg, New York), but there is little data to guide their approach. The overall objective of this study is to utilize a computational model of mechanically ventilated lungs to assess how patient-specific lung mechanics and ventilator settings impact lung tidal volume (VT). METHODS: We developed a lumped-parameter computational model of multiple patients connected to a shared ventilator and validated it against a similar experimental study. We used this model to evaluate how patient-specific lung compliance and resistance would impact VT under 4 ventilator settings of pressure control level, PEEP, breathing frequency, and inspiratory:expiratory ratio. RESULTS: Our computational model predicts VT within 10% of experimental measurements. Using this model to perform a parametric study, we provide proof-of-concept for an algorithm to better match patients in different hypothetical scenarios of a single ventilator shared by > 1 patient. CONCLUSIONS: Assigning patients to preset ventilators based on their required level of support on the lower PEEP/higher [Formula: see text] scale of the National Institute of Health's National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute ARDS Clinical Network (ARDSNet), secondary to lung mechanics, could be used to overcome some of the legitimate concerns of placing multiple patients on a single ventilator. We emphasize that our results are currently based on a computational model that has not been validated against any preclinical or clinical data. Therefore, clinicians considering this approach should not look to our study as an exact estimate of predicted patient VT values.


Assuntos
Infecções por Coronavirus/fisiopatologia , Infecções por Coronavirus/terapia , Pneumonia Viral/fisiopatologia , Pneumonia Viral/terapia , Respiração com Pressão Positiva/instrumentação , Ventiladores Mecânicos/provisão & distribuição , Algoritmos , Betacoronavirus , COVID-19 , Simulação por Computador , Infecções por Coronavirus/epidemiologia , Humanos , Pandemias , Pneumonia Viral/epidemiologia , Estudo de Prova de Conceito , Mecânica Respiratória , SARS-CoV-2
5.
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol ; 62(1): 14-22, 2020 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31513744

RESUMO

Maintaining the three-dimensional architecture and cellular complexity of lung tissue ex vivo can enable elucidation of the cellular and molecular pathways underlying chronic pulmonary diseases. Precision-cut lung slices (PCLS) are one human-lung model with the potential to support critical mechanistic studies and early drug discovery. However, many studies report short culture times of 7-10 days. Here, we systematically evaluated poly(ethylene glycol)-based hydrogel platforms for the encapsulation of PCLS. We demonstrated the ability to support ex vivo culture of embedded PCLS for at least 21 days compared with control PCLS floating in media. These customized hydrogels maintained PCLS architecture (no difference), viability (4.7-fold increase, P < 0.0001), and cellular phenotype as measured by SFTPC (1.8-fold increase, P < 0.0001) and vimentin expression (no change) compared with nonencapsulated controls. Collectively, these results demonstrate that hydrogel biomaterials support the extended culture times required to study chronic pulmonary diseases ex vivo using PCLS technology.


Assuntos
Materiais Biocompatíveis/administração & dosagem , Hidrogéis/administração & dosagem , Pulmão/patologia , Técnicas de Cultura de Órgãos/métodos , Animais , Humanos , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Doença Pulmonar Obstrutiva Crônica/patologia
6.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol ; 316(2): L303-L320, 2019 02 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30461289

RESUMO

Chronic pulmonary diseases, including idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), pulmonary hypertension (PH), and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), account for staggering morbidity and mortality worldwide but have limited clinical management options available. Although great progress has been made to elucidate the cellular and molecular pathways underlying these diseases, there remains a significant disparity between basic research endeavors and clinical outcomes. This discrepancy is due in part to the failure of many current disease models to recapitulate the dynamic changes that occur during pathogenesis in vivo. As a result, pulmonary medicine has recently experienced a rapid expansion in the application of engineering principles to characterize changes in human tissues in vivo and model the resulting pathogenic alterations in vitro. We envision that engineering strategies using precision biomaterials and advanced biomanufacturing will revolutionize current approaches to disease modeling and accelerate the development and validation of personalized therapies. This review highlights how advances in lung tissue characterization reveal dynamic changes in the structure, mechanics, and composition of the extracellular matrix in chronic pulmonary diseases and how this information paves the way for tissue-informed engineering of more organotypic models of human pathology. Current translational challenges are discussed as well as opportunities to overcome these barriers with precision biomaterial design and advanced biomanufacturing techniques that embody the principles of personalized medicine to facilitate the rapid development of novel therapeutics for this devastating group of chronic diseases.


Assuntos
Fibrose Pulmonar Idiopática/patologia , Pneumopatias/patologia , Doença Pulmonar Obstrutiva Crônica/patologia , Animais , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Humanos , Pulmão/patologia
7.
J Biomech Eng ; 134(5): 054501, 2012 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22757496

RESUMO

Recent studies have shown that capacitance measurements of large arteries provide better prognosis and diagnosis than tests of resistance alone in pulmonary hypertension (Mahapatra et al., 2006, "Relationship of Pulmonary Arterial Capacitance and Mortality in Idiopathic Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension," J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., 47(4), pp. 799-803; Reuben, 1971, "Compliance of the Human Pulmonary Arterial System in Disease," Circ. Res., 29, pp. 40-50]. Decreased arterial capacitance causes increased load to the heart and is the direct result of increased stiffness and elastic modulus of the arterial wall. Here, we validate a pressure-diameter (PD) method for comparing the elastic modulus and collagen engagement for post-hilar pulmonary arteries with a large range of arterial diameter. The tissue mechanics of the post-hilar arteries are not well-characterized in pulmonary hypertension. It is believed that future studies with this method will provide useful insight into the role of passive tissue mechanics of these arteries in the pathophysiology of pulmonary hypertension, eventually improving clinical diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. Post-hilar pulmonary arteries, excised from healthy and hypertensive calves and healthy cows, were inflated over a range of 0 [mm Hg] to 110 [mm Hg] in an isolated tissue bath. Internal pressure was recorded with an electric pressure catheter. Artery diameter and longitudinal stretch were recorded photographically. Stress-strain data curves were extracted using Lame's law of thick-walled tubes. Radial strips were removed from each section and tested in a uniaxial (MTS) tester for validation. Both the elastic modulus and collagen engagement strain were similar to results obtained by more traditional means. The average difference between measured values of the two methods for collagen engagement strain was 3.3% of the average value of the engagement strain. The average difference between the measured values of the two methods for modulus of elasticity was 7.4% of the average value of the modulus. The maximum, theoretical, relative error for the stress determined with the PD method was calculated at 20.3%. The PD method proved to be a suitable replacement for uniaxial strain tests in comparing collagen engagement strains. The method allowed faster testing of tissues of multiple diameters, while removing the effect of end conditions. The PD method will be of further utility in continued study of tissue mechanics in pulmonary hypertension studies.


Assuntos
Colágeno/metabolismo , Módulo de Elasticidade , Teste de Materiais/métodos , Pressão , Artéria Pulmonar/metabolismo , Estresse Mecânico , Animais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Bovinos
8.
Ann Biomed Eng ; 40(7): 1419-33, 2012 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22237861

RESUMO

Understanding the mechanical behavior of proximal pulmonary arteries (PAs) is crucial to evaluating pulmonary vascular function and right ventricular afterload. Early and current efforts focus on these arteries' histological changes, in vivo pressure-diameter behavior and mechanical properties under in vitro mechanical testing. However, the in vivo stretch and stress states remain poorly characterized. To further understand the mechanical behavior of the proximal PAs under physiological conditions, this study computed the residual stretch and the in vivo circumferential stretch state in the main pulmonary arteries in both control and hypertensive calves by using in vitro and in vivo artery geometry data, and modeled the impact of residual stretch and arterial remodeling on the in vivo circumferential stretch distribution and collagen engagement in the main pulmonary artery. We found that the in vivo circumferential stretch distribution in both groups was nonuniform across the vessel wall with the largest stretch at the outer wall, suggesting that collagen at the outer wall would engage first. It was also found that the circumferential stretch was more uniform in the hypertensive group, partially due to arterial remodeling that occurred during their hypoxic treatment, and that their onset of collagen engagement occurred at a higher pressure. It is concluded that the residual stretch and arterial remodeling have strong impact on the in vivo stretch state and the collagen engagement and thus the mechanical behavior of the main pulmonary artery in calves.


Assuntos
Pressão Sanguínea , Colágeno/metabolismo , Hipertensão Pulmonar , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Artéria Pulmonar , Estresse Fisiológico , Animais , Bovinos , Hipertensão Pulmonar/metabolismo , Hipertensão Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Artéria Pulmonar/metabolismo , Artéria Pulmonar/fisiopatologia
9.
Compr Physiol ; 2(1): 295-319, 2012 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23728987

RESUMO

he relationship between cardiac function and the afterload against which the heart muscle must work to circulate blood throughout the pulmonary circulation is defined by a complex interaction between many coupled system parameters. These parameters range broadly and incorporate system effects originating primarily from three distinct locations: input power from the heart, hydraulic impedance from the large conduit pulmonary arteries, and hydraulic resistance from the more distal microcirculation. These organ systems are not independent, but rather, form a coupled system in which a change to any individual parameter affects all other system parameters. The result is a highly nonlinear system which requires not only detailed study of each specific component and the effect of disease on their specific function, but also requires study of the interconnected relationship between the microcirculation, the conduit arteries, and the heart in response to age and disease. Here, we investigate systems-level changes associated with pulmonary hypertensive disease progression in an effort to better understand this coupled relationship.


Assuntos
Hipertensão Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Circulação Pulmonar/fisiologia , Função Ventricular Direita/fisiologia , Animais , Pressão Sanguínea/fisiologia , Progressão da Doença , Humanos , Microcirculação/fisiologia , Artéria Pulmonar/fisiologia , Resistência Vascular/fisiologia , Rigidez Vascular/fisiologia
10.
Compr Physiol ; 2(1): 295-319, 2012 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23487595

RESUMO

The relationship between cardiac function and the afterload against which the heart muscle must work to circulate blood throughout the pulmonary circulation is defined by a complex interaction between many coupled system parameters. These parameters range broadly and incorporate system effects originating primarily from three distinct locations: input power from the heart, hydraulic impedance from the large conduit pulmonary arteries, and hydraulic resistance from the more distal microcirculation. These organ systems are not independent, but rather, form a coupled system in which a change to any individual parameter affects all other system parameters. The result is a highly nonlinear system which requires not only detailed study of each specific component and the effect of disease on their specific function, but also requires study of the interconnected relationship between the microcirculation, the conduit arteries, and the heart in response to age and disease. Here, we investigate systems-level changes associated with pulmonary hypertensive disease progression in an effort to better understand this coupled relationship.

11.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol ; 301(5): H1810-8, 2011 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21856906

RESUMO

Understanding how arterial remodeling changes the mechanical behavior of pulmonary arteries (PAs) is important to the evaluation of pulmonary vascular function. Early and current efforts have focused on the arteries' histological changes, their mechanical properties under in vitro mechanical testing, and their zero-stress and no-load states. However, the linkage between the histology and mechanical behavior is still not well understood. To explore this linkage, we investigated the geometry, residual stretch, and histology of proximal PAs in both adult rat and neonatal calf hypoxic models of pulmonary hypertension (PH), compared their changes due to chronic hypoxia across species, and proposed a two-layer mechanical model of artery to relate the opening angle to the stiffness ratio of the PA outer to inner layer. We found that the proximal PA remodeling in calves was quite different from that in rats. In rats, the arterial wall thickness, inner diameter, and outer layer thickness fraction all increased dramatically in PH and the opening angle decreased significantly, whereas in calves, only the arterial wall thickness increased in PH. The proposed model predicted that the stiffness ratio of the calf proximal PAs changed very little from control to hypertensive group, while the decrease of opening angle in rat proximal PAs in response to chronic hypoxia was approximately linear to the increase of the stiffness ratio. We conclude that the arterial remodeling in rat and calf proximal PAs is different and the change of opening angle can be linked to the change of the arterial histological structure and mechanics.


Assuntos
Pressão Sanguínea , Hipertensão Pulmonar/patologia , Hipertensão Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Hipóxia/complicações , Artéria Pulmonar/patologia , Artéria Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Animais , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Bovinos , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Módulo de Elasticidade , Hipertensão Pulmonar Primária Familiar , Hipertensão Pulmonar/etiologia , Hipóxia/patologia , Hipóxia/fisiopatologia , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Ratos , Ratos Sprague-Dawley , Especificidade da Espécie , Estresse Mecânico
12.
J Biomech Eng ; 133(5): 051002, 2011 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21599093

RESUMO

A new constitutive model for elastic, proximal pulmonary artery tissue is presented here, called the total crimped fiber model. This model is based on the material and microstructural properties of the two main, passive, load-bearing components of the artery wall, elastin, and collagen. Elastin matrix proteins are modeled with an orthotropic neo-Hookean material. High stretch behavior is governed by an orthotropic crimped fiber material modeled as a planar sinusoidal linear elastic beam, which represents collagen fiber deformations. Collagen-dependent artery orthotropy is defined by a structure tensor representing the effective orientation distribution of collagen fiber bundles. Therefore, every parameter of the total crimped fiber model is correlated with either a physiologic structure or geometry or is a mechanically measured material property of the composite tissue. Further, by incorporating elastin orthotropy, this model better represents the mechanics of arterial tissue deformation. These advancements result in a microstructural total crimped fiber model of pulmonary artery tissue mechanics, which demonstrates good quality of fit and flexibility for modeling varied mechanical behaviors encountered in disease states.


Assuntos
Tecido Elástico/metabolismo , Elastina/metabolismo , Colágenos Fibrilares/metabolismo , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Artéria Pulmonar/metabolismo , Animais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Bovinos , Colágeno/metabolismo , Simulação por Computador , Elasticidade , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Estresse Mecânico
13.
Compr Physiol ; 1(3): 1413-35, 2011 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23733649

RESUMO

This article introduces the concept of pulmonary vascular stiffness, discusses its increasingly recognized importance as a diagnostic marker in the evaluation of pulmonary vascular disease, and describes methods to measure and model it clinically, experimentally, and computationally. It begins with a description of systems-level methods to evaluate pulmonary vascular compliance and recent clinical efforts in applying such techniques to better predict patient outcomes in pulmonary arterial hypertension. It then progresses from the systems-level to the local level, discusses proposed methods by which upstream pulmonary vessels increase in stiffness, introduces concepts around vascular mechanics, and concludes by describing recent work incorporating advanced numerical methods to more thoroughly evaluate changes in local mechanical properties of pulmonary arteries.


Assuntos
Hipertensão Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Modelos Biológicos , Circulação Pulmonar , Rigidez Vascular , Animais , Humanos
14.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 108(4): 968-75, 2010 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20093662

RESUMO

Developing clinical work suggests that vascular stiffening plays a role in the progression of pulmonary hypertension (PH), while recent studies in animal models of hypoxic PH have found significant proximal vascular stiffening in the diseased population. Here, we develop and validate a minimally invasive, clinically realizable method to estimate the local elastic modulus of the proximal pulmonary arteries from pressure-diameter (PD) data. PD measurements were made in the main pulmonary arteries of 16 calves; lumen diameter was assessed using color M-mode tissue Doppler imaging ultrasound, while pressure was measured via catheter. Two methods corresponding to thin-walled pressure vessel theory ("thin") and Lame's equation for a thick-walled cylinder ("thick") were used to approximate the artery elastic modulus from PD measurements. The harvested arteries were tested independently to determine their "true" ex vivo elastic modulus and stiffness. Both approximations displayed excellent correlation with ex vivo elastic modulus of the calf main pulmonary artery (thin r(2) = 0.811; thick r(2) = 0.844; both P < 0.01). Bland-Altman analysis indicated that the thick-walled approximation has better overall agreement with ex vivo modulus. The approximations displayed quantitatively distinct regression slopes that were statistically different (P = 0.02). The elastic modulus of the main pulmonary artery can be reasonably estimated from combined color M-mode tissue Doppler imaging ultrasound and catheter pressure measurements in calves. Such measurements may be a valuable tool in the diagnosis and treatment of human PH.


Assuntos
Módulo de Elasticidade/fisiologia , Hipertensão Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Artéria Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Animais , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Pressão Sanguínea/fisiologia , Cateterismo Cardíaco , Bovinos , Doença Crônica , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Hipertensão Pulmonar/diagnóstico por imagem , Hipertensão Pulmonar/patologia , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Masculino , Artéria Pulmonar/diagnóstico por imagem , Artéria Pulmonar/patologia , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Ultrassonografia Doppler em Cores
15.
Int J Struct Changes Sol ; 2(1): 19-29, 2010 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21822502

RESUMO

Many biological materials are composites composed of a soft matrix reinforced with stiffer fibers. These stiffer fibers may have a tortuous shape and wind through the soft matrix. At small material deformation, these fibers deform in a bending mode and contribute little to the material stiffness; at large material deformation, these fibers deform in a stretching mode and induce a stiffening effect in the material behavior. The transition from bending mode deformation to stretching mode deformation yields a characteristic J-shape stress-strain curve. In addition, the spatial distribution of these fibers may render the composite an anisotropic behavior. In this paper, we present an anisotropic finite-deformation hyperelastic constitutive model for such materials. Here, the matrix is modeled as an isotropic neo-Hookean material. "The behaviors of single tortuous fiber are represented by a crimped fiber model". The anisotropic behavior is introduced by a structure tensor representing the effective orientation distribution of crimped fibers. Parametric studies show the effect of fiber tortuosity and fiber orientation distribution on the overall stress-strain behaviors of the materials.

16.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol ; 295(4): H1451-9, 2008 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18660454

RESUMO

Extracellular matrix remodeling has been proposed as one mechanism by which proximal pulmonary arteries stiffen during pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Although some attention has been paid to the role of collagen and metallomatrix proteins in affecting vascular stiffness, much less work has been performed on changes in elastin structure-function relationships in PAH. Such work is warranted, given the importance of elastin as the structural protein primarily responsible for the passive elastic behavior of these conduit arteries. Here, we study structure-function relationships of fresh arterial tissue and purified arterial elastin from the main, left, and right pulmonary artery branches of normotensive and hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertensive neonatal calves. PAH resulted in an average 81 and 72% increase in stiffness of fresh and digested tissue, respectively. Increase in stiffness appears most attributable to elevated elastic modulus, which increased 46 and 65%, respectively, for fresh and digested tissue. Comparison between fresh and digested tissues shows that, at 35% strain, a minimum of 48% of the arterial load is carried by elastin, and a minimum of 43% of the change in stiffness of arterial tissue is due to the change in elastin stiffness. Analysis of the stress-strain behavior revealed that PAH causes an increase in the strains associated with the physiological pressure range but had no effect on the strain of transition from elastin-dominant to collagen-dominant behavior. These results indicate that mechanobiological adaptations of the continuum and geometric properties of elastin, in response to PAH, significantly elevate the circumferential stiffness of proximal pulmonary arterial tissue.


Assuntos
Elastina/metabolismo , Hipertensão/metabolismo , Artéria Pulmonar/metabolismo , Adaptação Fisiológica , Animais , Pressão Sanguínea , Bovinos , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Elasticidade , Elastina/química , Oxigenoterapia Hiperbárica , Hipertensão/etiologia , Hipertensão/patologia , Hipertensão/fisiopatologia , Masculino , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Conformação Proteica , Artéria Pulmonar/patologia , Artéria Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Estresse Mecânico , Relação Estrutura-Atividade
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