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Creators/Authors contains: "Vorp, David A"

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  1. Introduction: Dissection or rupture of the aorta is accompanied by high mortality rates, and there is a pressing need for better prediction of these events for improved patient management and clinical outcomes. Biomechanically, these events represent a situation wherein the locally acting wall stress exceed the local tissue strength. Based on recent reports for polymers, we hypothesized that aortic tissue failure strength and stiffness are directly associated with tissue mass density. The objective of this work was to test this novel hypothesis for porcine thoracic aorta. Methods: Three tissue specimens from freshly harvested porcine thoracic aorta were treated with either collagenase or elastase to selectively degrade structural proteins in the tissue, or with phosphate buffer saline (control). The tissue mass and volume of each specimen were measured before and after treatment to allow for density calculation, then mechanically tested to failure under uniaxial extension. Results: Protease treatments resulted in statistically significant tissue density reduction (sham vs. collagenase p = 0.02 and sham vs elastase p = 0.003), which in turn was significantly and directly correlated with both ultimate tensile strength (sham vs. collagenase p = 0.02 and sham vs elastase p = 0.03) and tangent modulus (sham vs. collagenase p = 0.007 and sham vs elastase p = 0.03). Conclusions: This work demonstrates for the first time that tissue stiffness and tensile strength are directly correlated with tissue density in proteolytically-treated aorta. These findings constitute an important step towards understanding aortic tissue failure mechanisms and could potentially be leveraged for non-invasive aortic strength assessment through density measurements, which could have implications to clinical care. 
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  2. null (Ed.)
    Abstract Background The pia arachnoid complex (PAC) is a cerebrospinal fluid-filled tissue conglomerate that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. Pia mater adheres directly to the surface of the brain while the arachnoid mater adheres to the deep surface of the dura mater. Collagen fibers, known as subarachnoid trabeculae (SAT) fibers, and microvascular structure lie intermediately to the pia and arachnoid meninges. Due to its structural role, alterations to the biomechanical properties of the PAC may change surface stress loading in traumatic brain injury (TBI) caused by sub-concussive hits. The aim of this study was to quantify the mechanical and morphological properties of ovine PAC. Methods Ovine brain samples (n = 10) were removed from the skull and tissue was harvested within 30 min post-mortem. To access the PAC, ovine skulls were split medially from the occipital region down the nasal bone on the superior and inferior aspects of the skull. A template was used to remove arachnoid samples from the left and right sides of the frontal and occipital regions of the brain. 10 ex-vivo samples were tested with uniaxial tension at 2 mm s −1 , average strain rate of 0.59 s −1 , until failure at < 5 h post extraction. The force and displacement data were acquired at 100 Hz. PAC tissue collagen fiber microstructure was characterized using second-harmonic generation (SHG) imaging on a subset of n = 4 stained tissue samples. To differentiate transverse blood vessels from SAT by visualization of cell nuclei and endothelial cells, samples were stained with DAPI and anti-von Willebrand Factor, respectively. The Mooney-Rivlin model for average stress–strain curve fit was used to model PAC material properties. Results The elastic modulus, ultimate stress, and ultimate strain were found to be 7.7 ± 3.0, 2.7 ± 0.76 MPa, and 0.60 ± 0.13, respectively. No statistical significance was found across brain dissection locations in terms of biomechanical properties. SHG images were post-processed to obtain average SAT fiber intersection density, concentration, porosity, tortuosity, segment length, orientation, radial counts, and diameter as 0.23, 26.14, 73.86%, 1.07 ± 0.28, 17.33 ± 15.25 µm, 84.66 ± 49.18°, 8.15%, 3.46 ± 1.62 µm, respectively. Conclusion For the sizes, strain, and strain rates tested, our results suggest that ovine PAC mechanical behavior is isotropic, and that the Mooney-Rivlin model is an appropriate curve-fitting constitutive equation for obtaining material parameters of PAC tissues. 
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