Literature DB >> 31760221

Biomechanical and microstructural characterisation of the porcine stomach wall: Location- and layer-dependent investigations.

Melanie Bauer1, Enrique Morales-Orcajo1, Lisa Klemm1, Robert Seydewitz1, Victoria Fiebach1, Tobias Siebert2, Markus Böl3.   

Abstract

The mechanical properties of the stomach wall help to explain its function of storing, mixing, and emptying in health and disease. However, much remains unknown about its mechanical properties, especially regarding regional heterogeneities and wall microstructure. Consequently, the present study aimed to assess regional differences in the mechanical properties and microstructure of the stomach wall. In general, the stomach wall and the different tissue layers exhibited a nonlinear stress-stretch relationship. Regional differences were found in the mechanical response and the microstructure. The highest stresses of the entire stomach wall in longitudinal direction were found in the corpus (201.5 kPa), where food is ground followed by the antrum (73.1 kPa) and the fundus (26.6 kPa). In contrast, the maximum stresses in circumferential direction were 39.7 kPa, 26.2 kPa, and 15.7 kPa for the antrum, fundus, and corpus, respectively. Independent of the fibre orientation and with respect to the biaxial loading direction, partially clear anisotropic responses were detected in the intact wall and the muscular layer. In contrast, the innermost mucosal layer featured isotropic mechanical characteristics. Pronounced layers of circumferential and longitudinal muscle fibres were found in the fundus only, whereas corpus and antrum contained almost exclusively circumferential orientated muscle fibres. This specific stomach structure mirrors functional differences in the fundus as well as corpus and antrum. Within this study, the load transfer mechanisms, connected with these wavy layers but also in total with the stomach wall's microstructure, are discussed. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: This article examines for the first time the layer-specific mechanical and histological properties of the stomach wall attending to the location of the sample. Moreover, both mechanical behaviour and microstructure were explicitly match identifying the heterogeneous characteristics of the stomach. On the one hand, the results of this study contribute to the understanding of stomach mechanics and thus to their functional understanding of stomach motility. On the other hand, they are relevant to the fields of constitutive formulation of stomach tissue, whole stomach mechanics, and stomach-derived scaffolds i.e., tissue-engineering grafts.
Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Biaxial tension testing; Microstructure; Smooth muscle; Stomach wall; Tissue composition; Tissue staining

Year:  2019        PMID: 31760221     DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2019.11.038

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Biomater        ISSN: 1742-7061            Impact factor:   8.947


  3 in total

Review 1.  Strategies to Refine Gastric Stimulation and Pacing Protocols: Experimental and Modeling Approaches.

Authors:  Leo K Cheng; Nipuni D Nagahawatte; Recep Avci; Peng Du; Zhongming Liu; Niranchan Paskaranandavadivel
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2021-04-22       Impact factor: 5.152

2.  Influence of layer separation on the determination of stomach smooth muscle properties.

Authors:  Mischa Borsdorf; Markus Böl; Tobias Siebert
Journal:  Pflugers Arch       Date:  2021-04-26       Impact factor: 3.657

3.  Curcumin ameliorated low dose-Bisphenol A induced gastric toxicity in adult albino rats.

Authors:  Omnia Ibrahim Ismail; Manal Mahmoud Samy El-Meligy
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 4.996

  3 in total

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