Abstract
A primary deficiency in predicting the progression and rupture-risk of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) is an inability to assign patient-specific, heterogeneous biomechanical properties to the remodelling aortic wall. Toward this end, we investigated possible correlations between three quantities having the potential for non-invasive measurement (diameter, wall thickness, and strain) and local wall microstructure within evolving experimental AAAs. AAAs were initiated in male C57BL/6J mice via in situ adventitial application of elastase and allowed to progress for 1–4 weeks. Regional in vitro Green strain was assessed using custom panoramic digital image correlation and compared to local geometry and histology. Diameter correlated mildly with elastin grade and collagen, when considering all circumferential locations and remodeling times. Normalized wall thickness correlated strongly with normalized collagen area fraction, though with outliers in highly cellular regions. Circumferential Green strain correlated strongly with elastin grade when measured over the range of 20–140 mmHg, though the correlation weakened across a physiologic range of 80–120 mmHg. Axial strain correlated strongly between in vitro and physiologic ranges of pressures. Circumferential heterogeneities render diameter a poor predictor of underlying regional microstructure. Thickness may indicate collagen content, though corrections are needed in regions of increased cellularity. In vitro circumferential strain predicts local functional elastin over large ranges of pressure, but there is a need to extend this correlation to clinically relevant pressures. Axial strain in the aneurysmal shoulder region may reflect the elastic integrity within the apical region of the lesion and should be explored as an indicator of disease severity.
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