4.6 Article

Is arterial wall-strain stiffening an additional process responsible for atherosclerosis in coronary bifurcations?: an in vivo study based on dynamic CT and MRI

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.01120.2010

Keywords

atherosclerosis; coronary disease; wall stiffness; wall stress; biomechanics; computed tomography; magnetic resonance imaging

Funding

  1. Rhone-Alpes (France)
  2. Spanish Instituto de Salud Carlos III (CIBER initiative)
  3. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [DPI2007-63254]
  4. Ministerio de Sanidad [FIS PI06-0406]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Ohayon J, Gharib AM, Garcia A, Heroux J, Yazdani SK, Malve M, Tracqui P, Martinez MA, Doblare M, Finet G, Pettigrew RI. Is arterial wall-strain stiffening an additional process responsible for atherosclerosis in coronary bifurcations?: an in vivo study based on dynamic CT and MRI. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 301: H1097-H1106, 2011. First published June 17, 2011; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.01120.2010.-Coronary bifurcations represent specific regions of the arterial tree that are susceptible to atherosclerotic lesions. While the effects of vessel compliance, curvature, pulsatile blood flow, and cardiac motion on coronary endothelial shear stress have been widely explored, the effects of myocardial contraction on arterial wall stress/strain (WS/S) and vessel stiffness distributions remain unclear. Local increase of vessel stiffness resulting from wall-strain stiffening phenomenon (a local process due to the nonlinear mechanical properties of the arterial wall) may be critical in the development of atherosclerotic lesions. Therefore, the aim of this study was to quantify WS/S and stiffness in coronary bifurcations and to investigate correlations with plaque sites. Anatomic coronary geometry and cardiac motion were generated based on both computed tomography and MRI examinations of eight patients with minimal coronary disease. Computational structural analyses using the finite element method were subsequently performed, and spatial luminal arterial wall stretch (LWStretch) and stiffness (LWStiff) distributions in the left main coronary bifurcations were calculated. Our results show that all plaque sites were concomitantly subject to high LWStretch and high LWStiff, with mean amplitudes of 34.7 +/- 1.6% and 442.4 +/- 113.0 kPa, respectively. The mean LWStiff amplitude was found slightly greater at the plaque sites on the left main coronary artery (mean value: 482.2 +/- 88.1 kPa) compared with those computed on the left anterior descending and left circumflex coronary arteries (416.3 +/- 61.5 and 428.7 +/- 181.8 kPa, respectively). These findings suggest that local wall stiffness plays a role in the initiation of atherosclerotic lesions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available