4.5 Article

Age-Dependent Ascending Aorta Mechanics Assessed Through Multiphase CT

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 41, Issue 12, Pages 2565-2574

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-013-0856-9

Keywords

Ascending aorta; Aging; Mechanics; Imaging; Elasticity

Funding

  1. NIH [HL108239, HL104080]
  2. NIH NRSA pre-doctoral fellowship [HL112632]

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Quantification of the age- and gender-specific in vivo mechanical characteristics of the ascending aorta (AA) will allow for identification of abnormalities aside from changes brought on by aging alone. Multiphase clinical CT scans of 45 male patients between the ages of 30 and 79 years were analyzed to assess age-dependent in vivo AA characteristics. The three-dimensional AA geometry for each patient was reconstructed from the CT scans for 9-10 phases throughout the cardiac cycle. The AA circumference was measured during each phase and was used to determine the corresponding diameter, circumferential strain, and wall tension at each phase. The pressure-strain modulus was also determined for each patient. The mean diastolic AA diameter was significantly smaller among young (42.6 +/- A 5.2 years) at 29.9 +/- A 2.8 mm than old patients (69.0 +/- A 5.2 years) at 33.2 +/- A 3.2 mm. The circumferential AA strain from end-diastole to peak-systole decreased from 0.092 +/- A 0.03 in young to 0.056 +/- A 0.03 in old patients. The pressure-strain modulus increased two-fold from 68.4 +/- A 30.5 kPa in young to 162.0 +/- A 93.5 kPa in old patients, and the systolic AA wall tension increased from 268.5 +/- A 31.3 kPa in young to 304.9 +/- A 49.2 kPa in old patients. The AA dilates and stiffens with aging which increases the vessel wall tension, likely predisposing aneurysm and dissection.

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