Compression-Dependent Viscoelastic Behavior of Human Cervix Tissue

Author:

DeWall Ryan J.12,Varghese Tomy12,Kliewer Mark A.3,Harter Josephine M.4,Hartenbach Ellen M.5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Physics University of Wisconsin — Madison Madison, WI 53705

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering University of Wisconsin — Madison Madison, WI 53705

3. Department of Radiology University of Wisconsin — Madison Madison, WI 53705

4. Department of Pathology University of Wisconsin — Madison Madison, WI 53705

5. Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology University of Wisconsin — Madison Madison, WI 53705

Abstract

We have characterized the viscoelastic properties of human cervical tissue through a range of pre-compressional loads and testing frequencies. Mechanical testing is necessary to develop robust elasticity-based techniques for the diagnosis of cervical abnormalities. The storage modulus ( E′) and material damping (tan δ) were measured in 13 patients, 40 to 76 years old. Our results showed that E′ increased monotonically from approximately 4.7 to 6.3 kPa over the precompression range (1–6%) for a testing frequency of 1 Hz. Increases in precompressions of 4% or greater significantly increased E′ obtained after dynamic compression testing when data were normalized to 1% precompression. Tan δ remained fairly constant (∼0.35) and was not significantly affected by changes in precompression. E′ and tan δ increased significantly with frequency. E′ monotonically increased from 4.7 to 7.9 kPa for the 1–3% compression range (lowest precompression for 2% amplitude) and from 6.3 to 10.3 kPa for the 6–8% range (highest precompression for 2% amplitude) when increasing frequency from 1 to 30 Hz. Tan δ increased montonically from 0.35 to 0.45 for 2% amplitude compressions from 1 to 30 Hz regardless of initial precompression. Our results show that precompression and testing frequency must be taken into account in orderto obtain consistent measurements in mechanical diagnostic tests developed for cervical abnormalities.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology

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