Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater. 2014 Jan;29:138-50. doi: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2013.08.027. Epub 2013 Sep 17.
The mechanical processes that underlie mild traumatic brain injury from physical insults are not well understood. One aspect in particular that has not been examined is the tissue fluid, which is known to be critical in the mechanical function of other organs. To investigate the contributions of solid-fluid interactions to brain tissue mechanics, we performed confined compression tests, that force the extracellular fluid (ECF) to flow in the direction of the deformation, on 6.35mm diameter, 3mm long cylindrical samples excised from various regions of rat brains. Two types of tests in deformation control, (1) quasi-static, slow and moderate constant strain rate tests at 0.64×10(-5)/s, 0.001/s and 1/s to large strains and (2) several applications of slow linear deformation to 5% strain each followed by stress relaxation are employed to explore the solid-fluid interaction. At slow and moderate compressive strain rates, we observed stress peaks in the applied strain range at about 11%, whose magnitudes exhibited statistically significant dependence on strain rate. These data suggest that the ECF carries load until the tissue is sufficiently damaged to permit pathological fluid flow. Under the slow ramp rate in the ramp-relaxation cycles protocol, commonly used to estimate permeability, the stress relaxes to zero after the first cycle, rather than to a non-zero equilibrium stress corresponding to the applied strain, which further implicates mechanical damage. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of changes in tissue microstructure during confined compression, before and after compression, provides further evidence of tissue damage. The solid-fluid interactions, reflected in the morphology of the stress-stretch curves and supported by the MRI data, suggest that increases in hydrostatic pressure in the ECF may contribute to mechanical damage of brain tissue.
导致轻度创伤性脑损伤的机械过程尚未得到很好的理解。特别是一个尚未被研究的方面是组织液,已知它在其他器官的机械功能中至关重要。为了研究固液相互作用对脑组织力学的贡献,我们对从大鼠大脑不同区域切下的直径为 6.35mm、长 3mm 的圆柱形样品进行了受限压缩试验,该试验迫使细胞外液(ECF)沿变形方向流动。我们进行了两种变形控制的测试:(1)在 0.64×10(-5)/s、0.001/s 和 1/s 下进行准静态、缓慢和中等恒应变速率测试,以达到大应变;(2)缓慢线性变形的多次应用,每次变形 5%,随后进行应力松弛,以探索固液相互作用。在缓慢和中等压缩应变速率下,我们在大约 11%的施加应变范围内观察到了应力峰值,其大小表现出与应变速率的显著依赖关系。这些数据表明,ECF 在组织受到足够损伤以允许病理性流体流动之前承受载荷。在斜坡-松弛循环协议中的缓慢斜坡率下,通常用于估计渗透率,在第一个循环后,应力会松弛到零,而不是松弛到与施加应变对应的非零平衡应力,这进一步表明存在机械损伤。在受限压缩前后进行的磁共振成像(MRI)显示组织微结构变化,为组织损伤提供了进一步的证据。固液相互作用,反映在应力-拉伸曲线的形态上,并得到 MRI 数据的支持,表明 ECF 中的静水压力增加可能导致脑组织的机械损伤。