Department Anatomy and Biomechanics, Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences, Dr.-Karl-Dorrek-Straße 30, 3500 Krems an der Donau, Austria; Austrian Center for Medical Innovation and Technology, Viktor Kaplan-Straße 2/1, 2700 Wiener Neustadt, Austria; Institute for Lightweight Design and Structural Biomechanics, University of Technology Vienna, Getreidemarkt 9, 1060 Wien, Austria.
Department Anatomy and Biomechanics, Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences, Dr.-Karl-Dorrek-Straße 30, 3500 Krems an der Donau, Austria.
Ann Anat. 2021 Jul;236:151717. doi: 10.1016/j.aanat.2021.151717. Epub 2021 Mar 6.
In medical training and research fresh human tissue is often replaced by preserved human or fresh animal tissue, due to availability and ethical reasons. Newer preservation approaches, such as the Thiel method, promise more realistic mechanical properties than conventional formaldehyde fixation. Concerning animal substitute material, porcine and bovine tissue is often chosen, as it is easily obtainable and certain similarity to human tissue is assumed. However, it has not been thoroughly investigated how Thiel preservation changes non-linear and viscoelastic behaviour of soft organ tissues. Furthermore, differences in these properties between animal tissue and human tissue have not been previously corroborated.
We conducted ramp and relaxation tensile tests on fresh human and Thiel preserved hepatic tissue, extracting strain-specific elastic moduli, and viscoelastic properties. The results for fresh human liver were then compared to corresponding results for Thiel preserved liver, as well as previously published results for porcine and bovine liver.
Our results showed that Thiel preservation seems to be associated with increased stiffness as well as decreased viscoelastic damping behaviour. Porcine liver was stiffer than human liver with similar viscoelastic properties. Bovine liver exhibited similar stiffness as human liver, however lower viscoelastic damping.
The differences between human and animal liver tissue, concerning their mechanical properties, can be explained by their characteristic histology. Changes in mechanical properties due to Thiel preservation might stem from altered protein cross-linking and dehydration. The results illustrate that appropriate materials for medical training systems must be selected based on which mechanical properties are relevant for the respective application.
由于可用性和伦理原因,在医学培训和研究中,新鲜的人体组织经常被保存的人体或新鲜动物组织所替代。较新的保存方法,如 Thiel 法,有望提供比传统甲醛固定更逼真的机械性能。关于动物替代材料,通常选择猪和牛组织,因为它们易于获得,并假定与人组织具有一定的相似性。然而,尚未彻底研究 Thiel 保存如何改变软器官组织的非线性和粘弹性行为。此外,以前也没有证实动物组织和人体组织之间这些特性的差异。
我们对新鲜的人体和 Thiel 保存的肝组织进行了斜坡和松弛拉伸测试,提取了特定应变的弹性模量和粘弹性特性。然后将新鲜人肝的结果与 Thiel 保存肝的相应结果以及先前发表的猪和牛肝的结果进行了比较。
我们的结果表明,Thiel 保存似乎与增加的刚性以及降低的粘弹性阻尼行为有关。猪肝比人肝更硬,具有相似的粘弹性特性。牛肝与人肝具有相似的刚性,但粘弹性阻尼较低。
关于其机械性能,人肝和动物肝组织之间的差异可以用其特征组织学来解释。由于 Thiel 保存而导致的机械性能变化可能源于蛋白质交联和脱水的改变。结果表明,必须根据各自应用的相关机械性能选择适当的医疗培训系统材料。