Elastin is a biopolymer known to provide resilience to extensible biologic tissues through elastic recoil of its highly crosslinked molecular network. Recent studies have demonstrated that elastic fibers in ligament provide significant resistance to tensile and especially shear stress. We hypothesized that the biomechanics of elastic fibers in ligament could be described as transversely isotropic with both fiber and matrix components in a multi-material mixture. Similarly, we hypothesized that material coefficients derived using the experimental tensile response could be used to predict the experimental shear response. Experimental data for uniaxial and transverse tensile testing of control tissues, and those enzymatically digested to disrupt elastin, were used as inputs to a material coefficient optimization algorithm. An additive decomposition of the strain energy was used to model the total stress as the sum of contributions from collagen fibers, elastic fibers, elastic matrix, and ground substance matrix. Matrices were modeled as isotropic Veronda-Westmann hyperelastic materials, whereas fiber families were modeled as piecewise exponential-linear hyperelastic materials. Optimizations provided excellent fits to the tensile experimental data for each treatment case and material model. Given the disparity in magnitude of stresses between longitudinal and transverse/shear tests and agreement between models and experiments, the hypothesized transversely isotropic material of elastin symmetry was supported. In addition, the coefficients derived from uniaxial and transverse tensile experiments provided reasonable predictions of the experimental behavior during shear deformation. The magnitudes of coefficients representing stress, nonlinearity, and stiffness supported the experimental evidence that elastic fibers dominate the low strain tensile and shear response of ligament. These findings demonstrate that the additive decomposition modeling strategy can represent each discrete fiber and matrix constituent and their relative contribution to the material response of the tissue. These experimental data and the validated constitutive model provide essential inputs and a framework to refine existing computational models of ligament and tendon mechanics by explicitly representing the mechanical contributions of elastic fibers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2019.07.018 | DOI Listing |
Polymers (Basel)
January 2025
Department of Dental Medicine and Nursing, Faculty of Medicine, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, 550169 Sibiu, Romania.
Following implantation, infections, inflammatory reactions, corrosion, mismatches in the elastic modulus, stress shielding and excessive wear are the most frequent reasons for orthopedic implant failure. Natural polymer-based coatings showed especially good results in achieving better cell attachment, growth and tissue-implant integration, and it was found that the inclusions of nanosized fillers in the coating structure improves biomineralization and consequently implant osseointegration, as the nanoparticles represent calcium phosphate nucleation centers and lead to the deposition of highly organized hydroxyapatite crystallites on the implant surface. In this study, magnetic nanoparticles synthesized by the co-precipitation method were used for the preparation of cellulose acetate composite coatings through the phase-inversion method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
January 2025
Department of Biomechanical Engineering, Faculty of Mechanics, Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Plytinės Str. 25, 10105 Vilnius, Lithuania.
This article investigates the influence of different solvents on the mechanical properties of biocompatible and biodegradable polycaprolactone (PCL) scaffolds. During the research, using electrospinning technology, 27 samples of polycaprolactone nanofibers exposed to different solvents were produced. A tensile test was performed on the produced nanofiber samples, and the nanofiber mechanical properties, yield strength, elastic modulus, and elastic elongation were calculated, and load-displacement and stress-strain dependence diagrams were compared from the obtained results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOsteoarthritis Cartilage
January 2025
College of Engineering, Boston University, Boston, MA.
Objective: The diagnosis of early osteoarthritis when therapeutic interventions may be most effective at reversing cartilage degeneration presents a clinical challenge. We describe a Raman arthroscopic probe and spectral analysis that measures biomarkers reflective of the content of predominant cartilage ECM constituents-glycosaminoglycans (GAG), collagen, water-essential to cartilage function. We compare the capability of Raman-probe-derived biomarkers to predict functional properties of cartilage to quantitative MRI and histopathology assessments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2025
Department of Textile Engineering, Amirkabir University of Technology, Tehran, Iran.
Braided composites are gaining attention in the most industrial applications. To design rods with optimal tensile properties against combined loads, experimental studies were conducted to investigate the effect of using axial yarn and core in different categories on the tensile properties of braided reinforced composite rods. In this study, six types of braided composite rods with different arrangements of braid components (axial yarn or core type) were produced using glass and polyester fibers with epoxy resin as the matrix.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransl Vis Sci Technol
January 2025
College of Optometry, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA.
Purpose: To characterize frequency-dependent wave speed dispersion in the human cornea using microliter air-pulse optical coherence elastography (OCE), and to evaluate the applicability of Lamb wave theory for determining corneal elastic modulus using high-frequency symmetric (S0) and anti-symmetric (A0) guided waves in cornea.
Methods: Wave speed dispersion analysis for transient (0.5 ms) microliter air-pulse stimulation was performed in four rabbit eyes ex vivo and compared to air-coupled ultrasound excitation.
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