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Optimization of pulmonary artery mechanical testing
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Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is an incurable disease with mortality within 3 years in 28-55% of high-risk patients. The progression of PAH has been known to be associated with increased vascular stiffness and vascular remodeling. Recent studies have suggested that increased stiffness may in fact be a driver for some of the metabolic abnormalities observed during PAH. To gain more insights into this relationship, we need to quantify the differences in mechanical properties of healthy and hypertensive pulmonary arteries. The stress-strain relationship is the gold standard for the ex-vivo stiffness measurement of arteries. This is obtained by obtaining force vs. distension data by tensile testing and using sample dimensions, i.e. length, lumen diameter, and wall thickness, to calculate engineering stress and strain. While this approach is well-optimized for large muscular arteries, it has not been used to test pulmonary arteries as their thin walls and low basal tone make it challenging to make precise measurements of sample wall thickness and lumen diameter. Thus, the goals of this study were to: 1) establish a reliable protocol for rat pulmonary artery tensile testing and 2) quantify the differences in stiffness between hypertensive and healthy pulmonary arteries. First, a methodology to improve the fidelity of determining the lumen diameter and wall thickness was developed. Using this approach, we observed that the modulus was negatively correlated with the length of the vessel segment tested. This suggests that vessel length should be standardized to perform reliable comparisons between groups. Next, we performed tensile tensing on both control and hypertensive pulmonary arteries, after standardizing vessel segment lengths. We initially modeled this tensile testing data using a one-term exponential equation and we observed that intact hypertensive arteries were ~2.7 times stiffer than control arteries at low strain (strain = 0.8). Whereas at high strain (strain = 2.8) intact and decellularized hypertensive arteries were 20 and 29 times stiffer than control arteries respectively. To better capture the viscoelastic properties of both, the cellular and ECM components of the vessels we also fit the tensile testing data using a two-term exponential equation. Using this two-term exponential model, we observed that hypertensive vessels were 2.2 times stiffer than the controls at normal hoop stress (20 kPa), and at the hypertensive hoop stress (66 kPa) the diseased vessels showed less variability in stiffness as compared to the controls. These findings and the methods developed in this study will be helpful in conducting and analyzing experiments to investigate the relationship between changes in biomechanical signals and the progression of PAH. R01HL151530 (KS), R01HL126514 (LS). This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
Title: Optimization of pulmonary artery mechanical testing
Description:
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is an incurable disease with mortality within 3 years in 28-55% of high-risk patients.
The progression of PAH has been known to be associated with increased vascular stiffness and vascular remodeling.
Recent studies have suggested that increased stiffness may in fact be a driver for some of the metabolic abnormalities observed during PAH.
To gain more insights into this relationship, we need to quantify the differences in mechanical properties of healthy and hypertensive pulmonary arteries.
The stress-strain relationship is the gold standard for the ex-vivo stiffness measurement of arteries.
This is obtained by obtaining force vs.
distension data by tensile testing and using sample dimensions, i.
e.
length, lumen diameter, and wall thickness, to calculate engineering stress and strain.
While this approach is well-optimized for large muscular arteries, it has not been used to test pulmonary arteries as their thin walls and low basal tone make it challenging to make precise measurements of sample wall thickness and lumen diameter.
Thus, the goals of this study were to: 1) establish a reliable protocol for rat pulmonary artery tensile testing and 2) quantify the differences in stiffness between hypertensive and healthy pulmonary arteries.
First, a methodology to improve the fidelity of determining the lumen diameter and wall thickness was developed.
Using this approach, we observed that the modulus was negatively correlated with the length of the vessel segment tested.
This suggests that vessel length should be standardized to perform reliable comparisons between groups.
Next, we performed tensile tensing on both control and hypertensive pulmonary arteries, after standardizing vessel segment lengths.
We initially modeled this tensile testing data using a one-term exponential equation and we observed that intact hypertensive arteries were ~2.
7 times stiffer than control arteries at low strain (strain = 0.
8).
Whereas at high strain (strain = 2.
8) intact and decellularized hypertensive arteries were 20 and 29 times stiffer than control arteries respectively.
To better capture the viscoelastic properties of both, the cellular and ECM components of the vessels we also fit the tensile testing data using a two-term exponential equation.
Using this two-term exponential model, we observed that hypertensive vessels were 2.
2 times stiffer than the controls at normal hoop stress (20 kPa), and at the hypertensive hoop stress (66 kPa) the diseased vessels showed less variability in stiffness as compared to the controls.
These findings and the methods developed in this study will be helpful in conducting and analyzing experiments to investigate the relationship between changes in biomechanical signals and the progression of PAH.
R01HL151530 (KS), R01HL126514 (LS).
This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format.
There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract.
Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
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