Differences in Transmural Pressure and Axial Loading Ex Vivo Affect Arterial Remodeling and Material Properties

Author:

Lawrence Amanda R.1,Gooch Keith J.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bioengineering and Institute for Medicine and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104

2. Department of Bioengineering and Institute for Medicine and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104; Department of Biomedical Engineering and Davis Heart Lung Research Institute, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210

Abstract

Arterial axial strains, present in the in vivo environment, often become reduced due to either bypass grafting or the normal aging process. Since the prevalence of hypertension increases with aging, arteries are often exposed to both decreased axial stretch and increased transmural pressure. The combined effects of these mechanical stimuli on the mechanical properties of vessels have not previously been determined. Porcine carotid arteries were cultured for 9 days at normal and reduced axial stretch ratios in the presence of normotensive and hypertensive transmural pressures using ex vivo perfusion techniques. Measurements of the amount of axial stress were obtained through longitudinal tension tests while inflation-deflation test results were used to determine circumferential stresses and incremental moduli. Macroscopic changes in artery geometry and zero-stress state opening angles were measured. Arteries cultured ex vivo remodeled in response to the mechanical environment, resulting in changes in arterial dimensions of up to ∼25% and changes in zero-stress opening angles of up to ∼55°. While pressure primarily affected circumferential remodeling and axial stretch primarily affected axial remodeling, there were clear examples of interactions between these mechanical stimuli. Culture with hypertensive pressure, especially when coupled with reduced axial loading, resulted in a rightward shift in the pressure-diameter relationship relative to arteries cultured with normotensive pressure. The observed differences in the pressure-diameter curves for cultured arteries were due to changes in artery geometry and, in some cases, changes in the arteries’ intrinsic mechanical properties. Relative to freshly isolated arteries, arteries cultured under mechanical conditions similar to in vivo conditions were stiffer, suggesting that aspects of the ex vivo culture other than the mechanical environment also influenced changes in the arteries’ mechanical properties. These results confirm the well-known importance of transmural pressure with regard to arterial wall mechanics while highlighting additional roles for axial stretch in determining mechanical behavior.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

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