4.6 Article

Location- and layer-dependent biomechanical and microstructural characterisation of the porcine urinary bladder wall

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2020.104275

Keywords

Biaxial tension testing; Layer-specific experiments; Microstructure; Smooth muscle; Tissue staining

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Germany (DFG) [BO 3091/9-1, SI 841/9-1]

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This study investigated the mechanical properties and microstructure of different layers of the bladder wall, revealing varying mechanical responses between the mucosal and muscular layers during loading. The muscular layer showed a higher degree of anisotropy compared to the mucosal layer, and the mucosal layer exhibited a stiffer mechanical response under larger stretches.
The knowledge of the mechanical properties of the urinary bladder wall helps to explain its storage and micturition functions in health and disease studies; however, these properties largely remain unknown, especially with regard to its layer-specific characteristics and microstructure. Consequently, this study entails the assessment of the layer-specific differences in the mechanical properties and microstructure of the bladder wall, especially during loading. Accordingly, ninety-two (n = 92) samples of porcine urinary bladder walls were mechanically and histologically analysed. Generally, the bladder wall and different tissue layers exhibit a non-linear stress-stretch relationship. In this study, the load transfer mechanisms were not only associated with the wavy structure of muscular and mucosal layers, but also with the entire bladder wall microstructure. Contextually, an interplay between the mucosal and muscular layers could be identified. Therefore, depending on the region and direction, the mucosal layer exhibited a stiffer mechanical response to equi-biaxial loading than that offered by the muscular layer when deformed to stretch levels higher than lambda = 1.6 to lambda = 2.2. For smaller stretches, the mucosal layer evinces no significant mechanical reaction, while the muscular layer bears the load. Owing to the orientation of its muscle fibres, the muscular layer shows an increased degree of anisotropy compared to the mucosal layer. Furthermore, the general incompressibility assumption is analysed for different layers by measuring the change in thickness during loading, which indicated a small volume loss.

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