Vorp David A, Vande Geest Jonathan P
Department of Surgery, McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, 100 Technology Drive, Suite 200, Pittsburgh, PA 15219, USA.
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2005 Aug;25(8):1558-66. doi: 10.1161/01.ATV.0000174129.77391.55.
Rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) represents a significant clinical event, having a mortality rate of 90% and being currently ranked as the 13th leading cause of death in the US. The ability to reliably evaluate the susceptibility of a particular AAA to rupture on a case-specific basis could vastly improve the clinical management of these patients. Because AAA rupture represents a mechanical failure of the degenerated aortic wall, biomechanical considerations are important to understand this process and to improve our predictions of its occurrence. Presented here is an overview of research to date related to the biomechanics of AAA rupture. This includes a summary of results related to ex vivo and in vivo mechanical testing, noninvasive AAA wall stress estimations, and potential mechanisms of AAA wall weakening. We conclude with a demonstration of a biomechanics-based approach to predicting AAA rupture on a patient-specific basis, which may ultimately prove to be superior to the widely and currently used maximum diameter criterion.
腹主动脉瘤(AAA)破裂是一个重大的临床事件,死亡率达90%,目前在美国是第13大致死原因。能够在具体病例基础上可靠地评估特定腹主动脉瘤的破裂易感性,可极大改善这些患者的临床管理。由于腹主动脉瘤破裂代表着退变主动脉壁的机械性失效,生物力学考量对于理解这一过程以及改善我们对其发生的预测很重要。本文概述了迄今为止与腹主动脉瘤破裂生物力学相关的研究。这包括与体外和体内力学测试、无创性腹主动脉瘤壁应力估计以及腹主动脉瘤壁弱化潜在机制相关的结果总结。我们最后展示了一种基于生物力学的方法,用于在患者个体基础上预测腹主动脉瘤破裂,这种方法最终可能证明优于目前广泛使用的最大直径标准。