Biomechanical characterization of tissue types in murine dissecting aneurysms based on histology and 4D ultrasound-derived strain

Author:

Hegner AchimORCID,Cebull Hannah L.ORCID,Gámez Antonio J.ORCID,Blase ChristopherORCID,Goergen Craig J.ORCID,Wittek AndreasORCID

Abstract

AbstractAbdominal aortic aneurysm disease is the local enlargement of the aorta, typically in the infrarenal section, causing up to 200,000 deaths/year. In vivo information to characterize the individual elastic properties of the aneurysm wall in terms of rupture risk is lacking. We used a method that combines 4D ultrasound and direct deformation estimation to compute in vivo 3D Green-Lagrange strain in murine angiotensin II-induced dissecting aortic aneurysms, a commonly used mouse model. After euthanasia, histological staining of cross-sectional sections along the aorta was performed in areas where in vivo strains had previously been measured. The histological sections were segmented into intact and fragmented elastin, thrombus with and without red blood cells, and outer vessel wall including the adventitia. Meshes were then created from the individual contours based on the histological segmentations. The isolated contours of the outer wall and lumen from both imaging modalities were registered individually using a coherent point drift algorithm. 2D finite element models were generated from the meshes, and the displacements from the registration were used as displacement boundaries of the lumen and wall contours. Based on the resulting deformed contours, the strains recorded were grouped according to segmented tissue regions. Strains were highest in areas containing intact elastin without thrombus attachment. Strains in areas with intact elastin and thrombus attachment, as well as areas with disrupted elastin, were significantly lower. Strains in thrombus regions with red blood cells were significantly higher compared to thrombus regions without. We then compared this analysis to statistical distribution indices and found that the results of each aligned, elucidating the relationship between vessel strain and structural changes. This work demonstrates the possibility of advancing in vivo assessments to a microstructural level ultimately improving patient outcomes.

Funder

Doctoral funding of the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences

Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering at Purdue University, Ross Fellowship

Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering at Purdue University, Hugh W. and Edna M. Donnan Fellowship

Hessian Ministry of Science and the Arts

American Heart Association

Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Modeling and Simulation,Biotechnology

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