Department of Cell Biology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Department of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater. 2020 May;105:103699. doi: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2020.103699. Epub 2020 Feb 19.
Pulmonary embolism occurs when blood flow to a part of the lungs is blocked by a venous thrombus that has traveled from the lower limbs. Little is known about the mechanical behavior of emboli under compressive forces from the surrounding musculature and blood pressure. We measured the stress-strain responses of human pulmonary emboli under cyclic compression, and showed that emboli exhibit a hysteretic stress-strain curve. The fibrin fibers and red blood cells (RBCs) are damaged during the compression process, causing irreversible changes in the structure of the emboli. We showed using electron and confocal microscopy that bundling of fibrin fibers occurs due to compression, and damage is accumulated as more cycles are applied. The stress-strain curves depend on embolus structure, such that variations in composition give quantitatively different responses. Emboli with a high fibrin component demonstrate higher normal stress compared to emboli that have a high RBC component. We compared the compression response of emboli to that of whole blood clots containing various volume fractions of RBCs, and found that RBCs rupture at a certain critical stress. We describe the hysteretic response characteristic of foams, using a model of phase transitions in which the compressed foam is segregated into coexisting rarefied and densified phases whose fractions change during compression. Our model takes account of the rupture of RBCs in the compressed emboli and stresses due to fluid flow through their small pores. Our results can help in classifying emboli as rich in fibrin or rich in red blood cells, and can help in understanding what responses to expect when stresses are applied to thrombi in vivo.
肺栓塞是指由于下肢静脉血栓脱落,导致肺部某一部分血流受阻而发生的疾病。目前人们对栓塞物在周围肌肉和血压产生的压缩力作用下的力学行为知之甚少。我们测量了人体肺栓塞物在循环压缩下的应力-应变响应,结果表明栓塞物表现出滞后的应力-应变曲线。在压缩过程中,纤维蛋白纤维和红细胞(RBC)会受到损伤,导致栓塞物结构发生不可逆变化。我们通过电子显微镜和共聚焦显微镜观察到,纤维蛋白纤维在压缩过程中发生束状排列,随着施加的循环次数增加,损伤不断累积。应力-应变曲线取决于栓塞物的结构,因此组成成分的变化会产生定量不同的响应。纤维蛋白成分较高的栓塞物表现出比 RBC 成分较高的栓塞物更高的正常应力。我们比较了栓塞物与含有不同 RBC 体积分数的全血血栓的压缩响应,发现 RBC 在达到一定临界应力时会破裂。我们使用相转变模型描述了泡沫的滞后响应特性,该模型将压缩泡沫分为共存的稀疏相和密集相,其分数在压缩过程中发生变化。我们的模型考虑了压缩栓塞物中 RBC 的破裂以及通过其小孔流动的流体产生的应力。我们的研究结果有助于将栓塞物分类为富含纤维蛋白或富含红细胞,并有助于理解在体内对血栓施加应力时会产生何种反应。