TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanical characterization of anisotropic planar biological soft tissues using finite indentation : experimental feasibility
AU - Cox, M.A.J.
AU - Driessen, N.J.B.
AU - Boerboom, R.A.
AU - Bouten, C.V.C.
AU - Baaijens, F.P.T.
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Heart valve tissue engineering offers a promising alternative for current treatment and replacement strategies, e.g., synthetic or bioprosthetic heart valves. In vitro mechanical conditioning is an important tool for engineering strong, implantable heart valves. Detailed knowledge of the mechanical properties of the native tissue as well as the developing tissue construct is vital for a better understanding and control of the remodeling processes induced by mechanical conditioning. The nonlinear, anisotropic and inhomogeneous mechanical behavior of heart valve tissue necessitates a mechanical characterization method that is capable of dealing with these complexities. In a recent computational study we showed that one single indentation test, combining force and deformation gradient data, provides sufficient information for local characterization of nonlinear soft anisotropic tissue properties. In the current study this approach is validated in two steps. First, indentation tests with varying indenter sizes are performed on linear elastic PDMS rubbers and compared to tensile tests on the same specimen. For the second step, tissue constructs are engineered using uniaxial or equibiaxial static constrained culture conditions. Digital image correlation (DIC) is used to quantify the anisotropy in the tissue constructs. For both validation steps, material parameters are estimated by inverse fitting of a computational model to the experimental results.
AB - Heart valve tissue engineering offers a promising alternative for current treatment and replacement strategies, e.g., synthetic or bioprosthetic heart valves. In vitro mechanical conditioning is an important tool for engineering strong, implantable heart valves. Detailed knowledge of the mechanical properties of the native tissue as well as the developing tissue construct is vital for a better understanding and control of the remodeling processes induced by mechanical conditioning. The nonlinear, anisotropic and inhomogeneous mechanical behavior of heart valve tissue necessitates a mechanical characterization method that is capable of dealing with these complexities. In a recent computational study we showed that one single indentation test, combining force and deformation gradient data, provides sufficient information for local characterization of nonlinear soft anisotropic tissue properties. In the current study this approach is validated in two steps. First, indentation tests with varying indenter sizes are performed on linear elastic PDMS rubbers and compared to tensile tests on the same specimen. For the second step, tissue constructs are engineered using uniaxial or equibiaxial static constrained culture conditions. Digital image correlation (DIC) is used to quantify the anisotropy in the tissue constructs. For both validation steps, material parameters are estimated by inverse fitting of a computational model to the experimental results.
U2 - 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2007.08.006
DO - 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2007.08.006
M3 - Article
C2 - 17897653
SN - 0021-9290
VL - 41
SP - 422
EP - 429
JO - Journal of Biomechanics
JF - Journal of Biomechanics
IS - 2
ER -