4.5 Article

The Layered Structure of Coronary Adventitia under Mechanical Load

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 101, Issue 11, Pages 2555-2562

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2011.10.043

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health-National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R01 HL087235-03]

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The mechanical loading-deformation relation of elastin and collagen fibril bundles is fundamental to understanding the microstructural properties of tissue. Here, we use multiphoton microscopy to obtain quantitative data of elastin and collagen fiber bundles under in situ loading of coronary adventitia. Simultaneous loading-imaging experiments on unstained fresh coronary adventitia allowed morphometric measurements of collagen and elastin fibril bundles and their individual deformation. Fiber data were analyzed at five different distension loading points (circumferential stretch ratio lambda(theta) = 1.0, 1.2, 1.4, 1.6, and 1.8) at a physiological axial stretch ratio of lambda(axial) = 1.3. Four fiber geometrical parameters were used to quantify the fibers: orientation angle, waviness, width, and area fraction. The results show that elastin and collagen fibers in inner adventitia form concentric densely packed fiber sheets, and the fiber orientation angle, width, and area fraction vary transmurally. The extent of fiber deformation depends on the initial orientation angle at no-distension state (lambda(theta) = 1.0 and lambda(axial) = 1.3). At higher distension loading, the orientation angle and waviness of fibers decrease linearly, but the width of collagen fiber is relatively constant at lambda(theta) = 1.0-1.4 and then decrease linearly for lambda(theta) >= 1.4. A decrease of the relative dispersion (SD/mean) of collagen fiber waviness suggests a heterogeneous mechanical response to loads. This study provides fundamental microstructural data for coronary artery biomechanics and we consider it seminal for structural models.

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