TY - JOUR
T1 - Epicardial prestrained confinement and residual stresses
T2 - A newly observed heart ventricle confinement interface
AU - Shi, Xiaodan
AU - Liu, Yue
AU - Copeland, Katherine M.
AU - McMahan, Sara R.
AU - Zhang, Song
AU - Butler, J. Ryan
AU - Hong, Yi
AU - Cho, Michael
AU - Bajona, Pietro
AU - Gao, Huajian
AU - Liao, Jun
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank the support of 1R01EB022018-01 from NIH, 13GRNT17150041 from AHA, and UT STARS. K.M.C. is supported by NIH T32 HL134613. Y.L. and H.G. have been supported by NSF grant no. CMMI-1562904. The authors gratefully thank Dr Bryn Brazile, Sarah Fitzgerald, Sammira Rais-Rohani, Dr Jim Cooley, and Amanda Lawrence for assistance and support.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019/3/1
Y1 - 2019/3/1
N2 - The heart epicardial layer, with elastin as the dominant component, has not been well investigated, specifically on how it contributes to ventricular biomechanics. In this study, we revealed and quantitatively assessed the overall status of prestraining and residual stresses exerted by the epicardial layer on the heart left ventricle (LV). During porcine heart wall dissection, we discovered that bi-layered LV surface strips, consisting of an epicardial layer and cardiac muscle, always curled towards the epicardial side due to epicardial residual stresses. We hence developed a curling angle characterization technique to intuitively and qualitatively reveal the location-dependency and direction-dependency of epicardial residual stresses. Moreover, by combining prestrain measurement and biaxial mechanical testing, we were able to quantify the epicardial prestrains and residual stresses on the unpressurized intact LV. To investigate the potential mechanical effect of epicardial prestraining, a finite-element (FE) model has been constructed, and we demonstrate that it is the prestraining of the epicardial layer, not the epicardial layer alone, providing an additional resistance mechanism during LV diastolic expansion and ventricular wall protection by reducing myocardial stress. In short, our study on healthy, native porcine hearts has revealed an important phenomenon—the epicardial layer, rich in elastin, acts like a prestrained ‘balloon’ that wraps around the heart and functions as an extra confinement and protection interface. The obtained knowledge fills a gap in ventricular biomechanics and will help design novel biomimicking materials or prosthetic devices to target the maintenance/recreation of this ventricle confinement interface.
AB - The heart epicardial layer, with elastin as the dominant component, has not been well investigated, specifically on how it contributes to ventricular biomechanics. In this study, we revealed and quantitatively assessed the overall status of prestraining and residual stresses exerted by the epicardial layer on the heart left ventricle (LV). During porcine heart wall dissection, we discovered that bi-layered LV surface strips, consisting of an epicardial layer and cardiac muscle, always curled towards the epicardial side due to epicardial residual stresses. We hence developed a curling angle characterization technique to intuitively and qualitatively reveal the location-dependency and direction-dependency of epicardial residual stresses. Moreover, by combining prestrain measurement and biaxial mechanical testing, we were able to quantify the epicardial prestrains and residual stresses on the unpressurized intact LV. To investigate the potential mechanical effect of epicardial prestraining, a finite-element (FE) model has been constructed, and we demonstrate that it is the prestraining of the epicardial layer, not the epicardial layer alone, providing an additional resistance mechanism during LV diastolic expansion and ventricular wall protection by reducing myocardial stress. In short, our study on healthy, native porcine hearts has revealed an important phenomenon—the epicardial layer, rich in elastin, acts like a prestrained ‘balloon’ that wraps around the heart and functions as an extra confinement and protection interface. The obtained knowledge fills a gap in ventricular biomechanics and will help design novel biomimicking materials or prosthetic devices to target the maintenance/recreation of this ventricle confinement interface.
KW - Cardiac elastin
KW - Epicardial layer
KW - Epicardial prestraining
KW - Epicardial residual stress
KW - Heart
KW - Ventricle confinement interface
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U2 - 10.1098/rsif.2019.0028
DO - 10.1098/rsif.2019.0028
M3 - Article
C2 - 30862283
AN - SCOPUS:85062879439
SN - 1742-5689
VL - 16
JO - Journal of the Royal Society Interface
JF - Journal of the Royal Society Interface
IS - 152
M1 - 20190028
ER -