Mallory Ann, Wetli Alaine, Neuroth Lucas M, Rhule Heather, Moorhouse Kevin, Satterfield Kelly, Thomas Colton, Tesny Angela, Kang Yun-Seok
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Vehicle Research and Test Center, Applied Biomechanics Division, East Liberty, Ohio, USA.
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
J Anat. 2024 Sep;245(3):501-509. doi: 10.1111/joa.14069. Epub 2024 Jul 15.
Postmortem human subject (PMHS) studies are essential to brain injury research in motor vehicle safety. However, postmortem deterioration reduces the similarity between postmortem test results and in vivo response in material testing of brain tissue and in biomechanical testing of the whole head. This pilot study explores the effect of potential preservatives on brain tissue breakdown to identify promising preservatives that warrant further investigation. To identify preservatives with potential to slow postmortem degradation, samples from an initial PMHS were refrigerated at 10°C to qualitatively compare tissue breakdown from 58 to 152 h postmortem after storage in candidate solutions. On brain tissue samples from a second PMHS, compressive stiffness was measured on six samples immediately after harvest for comparison to the stiffness of 23 samples that were stored at 10°C in candidate solutions for 24 h after harvest. The candidate solutions were artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) without preservatives; ACSF with a combination of antibiotics and antifungal agents; ACSF with added sodium bicarbonate; and ACSF with both the antibiotic/antifungal combination and sodium bicarbonate. Results were analyzed using multiple linear regression of specimen stiffness on harvest lobe and storage solution to investigate potential differences in tissue stiffness. Qualitative evaluation suggested that samples stored in a solution that contained both the antibiotic/antifungal combination and sodium bicarbonate exhibited less evidence of tissue breakdown than the samples stored without preservatives or with only one of those preservatives. In compression testing, samples tested immediately after harvest were significantly stiffer than samples tested after 24 h of storage at 10°C in ACSF (difference: -0.27 N/mm, 95% confidence interval (CI): -0.50, -0.05) or ACSF with antibiotics/antifungal agents (difference: -0.32 N/mm, 95% CI: -0.59, -0.04), controlling for harvest lobe. In contrast, the stiffness of samples tested after storage in either solution containing sodium bicarbonate was not significantly different from the stiffness of samples tested at harvest. There was no significant overall difference in the mean tissue stiffness between samples from the frontal and parietal lobes, controlling for storage solution. Given the importance of PMHS studies to brain injury research, any strategy that shows promise for helping to maintain in vivo brain material properties has the potential to improve understanding of brain injury mechanisms and tolerance to head injury and warrants further investigation. These pilot study results suggest that sodium bicarbonate has the potential to reduce the deterioration of brain tissue in biomechanical testing. The results motivate further evaluation of sodium bicarbonate as a preservative for biomechanical testing using additional test subjects, more comprehensive material testing, and evaluation under a broader set of test conditions including in whole-head testing. The effect of antibiotics and antifungal agents on brain tissue stiffness was minimal but may have been limited by the cold storage conditions in this study. Further exploration of the potential for microbial agents to preserve tissue postmortem would benefit from evaluation of the effects of storage temperature.
尸体人类受试者(PMHS)研究对于机动车安全领域的脑损伤研究至关重要。然而,死后组织降解会降低死后测试结果与脑组织材料测试及全脑生物力学测试中体内反应之间的相似性。这项初步研究探讨了潜在防腐剂对脑组织分解的影响,以确定值得进一步研究的有前景的防腐剂。为了确定有可能减缓死后降解的防腐剂,将来自最初一名PMHS的样本在10°C下冷藏,以定性比较在候选溶液中储存后死后58至152小时的组织分解情况。在来自第二名PMHS的脑组织样本上,收获后立即对六个样本测量压缩刚度,以便与收获后在候选溶液中于10°C储存24小时的23个样本的刚度进行比较。候选溶液有无防腐剂的人工脑脊液(ACSF);含有抗生素和抗真菌剂组合的ACSF;添加了碳酸氢钠的ACSF;以及含有抗生素/抗真菌剂组合和碳酸氢钠的ACSF。使用样本刚度对收获脑叶和储存溶液的多元线性回归分析结果,以研究组织刚度的潜在差异。定性评估表明,储存在含有抗生素/抗真菌剂组合和碳酸氢钠溶液中的样本,与未添加防腐剂或仅添加其中一种防腐剂储存的样本相比,组织分解的迹象更少。在压缩测试中,收获后立即测试的样本比在10°C下于ACSF(差异:-0.27 N/mm,95%置信区间(CI):-0.50,-0.05)或含有抗生素/抗真菌剂的ACSF中储存24小时后测试的样本明显更硬(差异:-0.32 N/mm,95% CI:-0.59,-0.04),同时控制收获脑叶。相比之下,储存在含有碳酸氢钠的任何一种溶液中后测试的样本刚度与收获时测试的样本刚度没有显著差异。在控制储存溶液的情况下,额叶和顶叶样本的平均组织刚度没有显著总体差异。鉴于PMHS研究对脑损伤研究的重要性,任何显示出有助于维持体内脑材料特性前景的策略都有可能增进对脑损伤机制和头部损伤耐受性的理解,值得进一步研究。这些初步研究结果表明,碳酸氢钠有可能在生物力学测试中减少脑组织的降解。这些结果促使进一步评估碳酸氢钠作为生物力学测试防腐剂的效果,使用更多受试对象、更全面的材料测试,并在包括全脑测试在内的更广泛测试条件下进行评估。抗生素和抗真菌剂对脑组织刚度的影响最小,但可能受本研究中的冷藏条件限制。进一步探索微生物制剂在死后保存组织的潜力将受益于对储存温度影响的评估。