Brillouin confocal microscopy to determine biomechanical properties of SULEEI-treated bovine pericardium for application in cardiac surgery

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND:Heart valves are exposed to a highly dynamic environment and underlie high tensile and shear forces during opening and closing. Therefore, analysis of mechanical performance of novel heart valve bioprostheses materials, like SULEEI-treated bovine pericardium, is essential and usually carried out by uniaxial tensile tests. Nevertheless, major drawbacks are the unidirectional strain, which does not reflect the in vivo condition and the deformation of the sample material. An alternative approach for measurement of biomechanical properties is offered by Brillouin confocal microscopy (BCM), a novel, non-invasive and three-dimensional method based on the interaction of light with acoustic waves. OBJECTIVE:BCM is a powerful tool to determine viscoelastic tissue properties and is, for the first time, applied to characterize novel biological graft materials, such as SULEEI-treated bovine pericardium. Therefore, the method has to be validated as a non-invasive alternative to conventional uniaxial tensile tests. METHODS:Vibratome sections of SULEEI-treated bovine pericardium (decellularized, riboflavin/UV-cross-linked and low-energy electron irradiated) as well as native and GA-fixed controls (n = 3) were analyzed by BCM. In addition, uniaxial tensile tests were performed on equivalent tissue samples and Young’s modulus as well as length of toe region were analyzed from stress-strain diagrams. The structure of the extracellular matrix (ECM), especially collagen and elastin, was investigated by multiphoton microscopy (MPM). RESULTS:SULEEI-treated pericardium exhibited a significantly higher Brillouin shift and hence higher tissue stiffness in comparison to native and GA-fixed controls (native: 5.6±0.2 GHz; GA: 5.5±0.1 GHz; SULEEI: 6.3±0.1 GHz; n = 3, p 

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)179-192
JournalClinical hemorheology and microcirculation
Publication statusPublished - 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85117393404
ORCID /0000-0001-5283-0290/work/141545115
ORCID /0000-0002-8047-2774/work/142241814
ORCID /0000-0003-0554-2178/work/142249877

Keywords

Library keywords