| Literature DB >> 36003475 |
Miriam Nightingale1,2, Alexander Gregory2,3, Taisiya Sigaeva4, Gary M Dobson3, Paul W M Fedak2,5, Jehangir J Appoo2,5, Elena S Di Martino2,6.
Abstract
Objective: This study correlates low strain tangential modulus (LTM) and transition zone onset (TZo) stress, biomechanical parameters that occur within the physiological range of stress seen in vivo, with tissue strength and histopathologic changes in aneurysmal ascending aortic tissue. Method: Ascending aortic aneurysm tissue samples were collected from 41 patients undergoing elective resection. Samples were subjected to planar biaxial testing to quantify LTM and TZo. These were then correlated with strength assessed from uniaxial testing and with histopathologic quantification of pathologic derangements in elastin, collagen, and proteoglycan (PG).Entities:
Keywords: ATAA, ascending thoracic aortic aneurysm; BAV, bicuspid aortic valve; ECM, extracellular matrix; HTM, high-strain tangential modulus; LTM, low-strain tangential modulus; PG, proteoglycan; TAV, tricuspid aortic valve; TZe, Stress at the end of the transition zone; TZo, onset stress of the transition zone; aneurysms; ascending aorta; biomarkers; biomechanics; histopathology
Year: 2021 PMID: 36003475 PMCID: PMC9390473 DOI: 10.1016/j.xjon.2021.12.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JTCVS Open ISSN: 2666-2736
Figure 1A, Typical loading and unloading curves for aortic aneurysm tissue. B, Loading and unloading curve showing typical deviation between physiological and supra-physiological strain. C, Illustration showing how low-strain tangential modulus (LTM) and high-strain tangential modulus (HTM) were derived from the biaxial mechanical response. D, Stress at onset of transition zone (TZo) as derived from the mechanical behavior. E, Energy loss is defined as the %difference between the loading and unloading mechanical behavior of the tissue (depicted by the area in green between the loading and unloading curves). Elastance (F) and strength (G) as derived from the mechanical response.
Patient demographics and preoperative characteristics
| Characteristic | Total (n = 41) | BAV (n = 24) | TAV (n = 17) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension, % | 49 | 37 | 65 |
| Smoking, % | 36 | 46 | 23 |
| Diabetes, % | 5 | 4 | 6 |
| Sex, male/female, n | 27/14 | 17/7 | 10/7 |
| Age, y, mean ± SD | 61.58 ± 11.5 | 57.12 ± 9.64 | 67.88 ± 11.20 |
| Aortic diameter, cm, mean ± SD | 5.31 ± 0.75 | 5.06 ± 0.36 | 5.66 ± 1.0 |
BAV, Bicuspid aortic valve; TAV, tricuspid aortic valve.
Histopathologic analysis versus mechanical properties
| Parameter | PG content, | Elastin | Collagen | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Content | Fragmentation | Fragmenttion distribution | Alteration | Alteration distribution | ||
| Circumferential direction | ||||||
| LTM | .038 (ρ = 0.39) | .041 (ρ = 0.39) | .089 | .082 | >.1 | >.1 |
| TZO | .015 (ρ = 0.45) | .0095 (ρ = 0.48) | .047 | .081 | >.1 | >.1 |
| Elastance | >.1 (ρ = 0.20) | >.1 (ρ = 0.12) | >.1 | >.1 | .045 | >.1 |
| Energy Loss | 7.0 × 10−4 (ρ = -0.60) | .087 (ρ = -0.33) | .0045 | >.1 | .0035 | .0011 |
| Axial direction | ||||||
| LTM | >.1 (ρ = 0.23) | >.1 (ρ = 0.29) | >.1 | >.1 | >.1 | >.1 |
| TZO | .028 (ρ = 0.41) | >.1 (ρ = 0.32) | .091 | >.1 | >.1 | >.1 |
| Elastance | >.1 (ρ = 0.02) | >.1 (ρ = -0.09) | >.1 | >.1 | >.1 | >.1 |
| Energy Loss | .0073 (ρ = -0.50) | >.1 (ρ = -0.31) | .0053 | >.1 | .031 | .0116 |
PG, Proteoglycan; LTM, low-strain tangential modulus; TZo, stress at onset of transition zone.
Figure 2Scatterplots and boxplots showing the significant associations between the mechanical and histopathological properties in the circumference direction. For the boxplots, the middle horizontal line represents the median value and the upper and lower borders of the box represent the upper and lower quartiles, respectively. The upper and lower whiskers represent the values at the upper/lower quartile ± 1.5 times the interquartile range (height of the box). Extra dots are considered outliers outside of this range. A, Low-strain tangential modulus (LTM) and proteoglycan (PG) content. B, LTM and elastin content. C, Stress at onset of transition zone (TZo) and PG content. D, TZo and elastin content. E, TZo and elastin fragmentation. F, energy loss and PG content. G, Energy loss and elastin fragmentation. H, Energy loss and collagen alteration. I, Elastance and collagen alteration. J, TZo and strength. K, Energy loss and strength. L, Elastance and strength.
Strength testing versus mechanical properties
| Parameter | Strength | |
|---|---|---|
| Circumferential | Axial | |
| Circumferential direction | ||
| LTM | .067 (ρ = 0.31) | .059 (ρ = 0.43) |
| TZO | .033 (ρ = 0.37) | >.1 (ρ = 0.33) |
| Elastance | .00073 (ρ = 0.55) | |
| Energy loss | .0014 (ρ = -0.53) | >.1 (ρ = -0.26) |
| Axial direction | ||
| LTM | .013 (ρ = 0.42) | .017 (ρ = 0.53) |
| TZO | .024 (ρ = 0.388) | >.1 (ρ = 0.30) |
| Elastance | >.1 (ρ = 0.33) | .01 (ρ = 0.56) |
| Energy loss | .00035 (ρ = -0.58) | .033 (ρ = -0.48) |
LTM, Low-strain tangential modulus; TZo, stress at onset of transition zone.
Figure 3A, Typical aortic tissue behavior illustrating the contribution of the elastin and collagen fibers for one direction. B, Change in biomechanical behavior in healthy versus ascending thoracic aortic aneurysm (ATAA) tissue. LTM, Low-strain tangential modulus; TZo, stress at onset of transition zone.
Figure 4Illustration showing how low-strain tangential modulus (LTM), stress at onset of transition zone (TZo), and energy loss can be derived from a pressure–strain loop from transesophageal echocardiography and speckle-tracking imaging analysis.