Literature DB >> 29715364

Quantitative Analysis of Tissue Damage Evolution in Porcine Liver With Interrupted Mechanical Testing Under Tension, Compression, and Shear.

Joseph Chen1, Bryn Brazile1, Raj Prabhu1, Sourav S Patnaik1, Robbin Bertucci1, Hongjoo Rhee2, M F Horstemeyer2, Yi Hong3, Lakiesha N Williams1, Jun Liao1,4.   

Abstract

In this study, the damage evolution of liver tissue was quantified at the microstructural level under tensile, compression, and shear loading conditions using an interrupted mechanical testing method. To capture the internal microstructural changes in response to global deformation, the tissue samples were loaded to different strain levels and chemically fixed to permanently preserve the deformed tissue geometry. Tissue microstructural alterations were analyzed to quantify the accumulated damages, with damage-related parameters such as number density, area fraction, mean area, and mean nearest neighbor distance (NND). All three loading states showed a unique pattern of damage evolution, in which the damages were found to increase in number and size, but decrease in NND as strain level increased. To validate the observed damage features as true tissue microstructural damages, more samples were loaded to the above-mentioned strain levels and then unloaded back to their reference state, followed by fixation. The most major damage-relevant features at higher strain levels remained after the release of the external loading, indicating the occurrence of permanent inelastic deformation. This study provides a foundation for future structure-based constitutive material modeling that can capture and predict the stress-state dependent damage evolution in liver tissue.

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29715364      PMCID: PMC5938066          DOI: 10.1115/1.4039825

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomech Eng        ISSN: 0148-0731            Impact factor:   2.097


  35 in total

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Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2015-03-05       Impact factor: 3.934

5.  Development of a computationally efficient full human body finite element model.

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Authors:  Nasim Ahmed; Jerome J Vernick
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8.  Operative and nonoperative management of blunt hepatic trauma in adults: a single-center report.

Authors:  Stavros Gourgiotis; Vasilis Vougas; Stylianos Germanos; Nikitas Dimopoulos; Ioannis Bolanis; Spyros Drakopoulos; Panagiotis Alfaras; Sotiris Baratsis
Journal:  J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Surg       Date:  2007-07-30

9.  Correlation of an FE Model of the Human Head with Local Brain Motion--Consequences for Injury Prediction.

Authors:  Svein Kleiven; Warren N Hardy
Journal:  Stapp Car Crash J       Date:  2002-11

10.  Using pressure to predict liver injury risk from blunt impact.

Authors:  Jessica L Sparks; John H Bolte; Rebecca B Dupaix; Kenneth H Jones; Steven M Steinberg; Rodney G Herriott; Jason A Stammen; Bruce R Donnelly
Journal:  Stapp Car Crash J       Date:  2007-10
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