The atrioventricular heart valve (AHV) leaflets have a complex microstructure composed of four distinct layers: atrialis, ventricularis, fibrosa and spongiosa. Specifically, the spongiosa layer is primarily proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Quantification of the GAGs' mechanical contribution to the overall leaflet function has been of recent focus for aortic valve leaflets, but this characterization has not been reported for the AHV leaflets. This study seeks to expand current GAG literature through novel mechanical characterizations of GAGs in AHV leaflets. For this characterization, mitral and tricuspid valve anterior leaflets (MVAL and TVAL, respectively) were: (i) tested by biaxial mechanical loading at varying loading ratios and by stress-relaxation procedures, (ii) enzymatically treated for removal of the GAGs and (iii) biaxially mechanically tested again under the same protocols as in step (i). Removal of the GAG contents from the leaflet was conducted using a 100 min enzyme treatment to achieve approximate 74.87% and 61.24% reductions of all GAGs from the MVAL and TVAL, respectively. Our main findings demonstrated that biaxial mechanical testing yielded a statistically significant difference in tissue extensibility after GAG removal and that stress-relaxation testing revealed a statistically significant smaller stress decay of the enzyme-treated tissue than untreated tissues. These novel findings illustrate the importance of GAGs in AHV leaflet behaviour, which can be employed to better inform heart valve therapeutics and computational models.
Rape and sexual assault are considered forms of gender violence, or violence against women, and affirmative consent policies were created as a primary prevention strategy to combat this kind of sexual violence on college and university campuses. Such policies are often promoted as being inclusive and applicable crossculturally because of the gender-neutral language within affirmative consent policies; however, the highly gendered nature of sexual assault discourse has become hegemonic and thereby unintentionally reinforces a heterosexually gendered false dichotomy about sexual violence. This qualitative study utilizes in-depth interviews with 10 gay men to explore how they perceive affirmative consent policies. The results found that gay men perceived an implicit heterosexual bias within affirmative consent policies that reinforced heterosexist conceptions of sex, gender, sexual scripts, and sexual assault. Ultimately, this made it challenging for participants to see themselves in affirmative consent policies. Moreover, it burdens gay men whose experiences with sex and consent, as well as sexual assault, do not fit within the heterosexist paradigm of current sexual assault and affirmative consent discourses/policies.
Purpose: Adequate, robust vascular responses to passive and active movement represent two distinct components linked to normal, healthy cardiovascular function. Currently, limited research exists determining if these vascular responses are altered in premenopausal females (PMF) when compared across sex or menstrual cycle phase. Methods: Vascular responses to passive leg movement (PLM) and handgrip (HG) exercise were assessed in PMF (n = 21) and age-matched men (n = 21). A subset of PMF subjects (n = 11) completed both assessments during the early and late follicular phase of their menstrual cycle. Microvascular function was assessed during PLM via changes in leg blood flow, and during HG exercise, via steady-state arm vascular conductance. Macrovascular (brachial artery [BA]) function was assessed during HG exercise via BA dilation responses as well as BA shear rate-dilation slopes. Results: Leg microvascular function, determined by PLM, was not different between sexes or across menstrual cycle phase. However, arm microvascular function, demonstrated by arm vascular conductance, was lower in PMF compared with men at rest and during HG exercise. Macrovascular function was not different between sexes or across menstrual cycle phase. Conclusions: This study identified similar vascular function across sex and menstrual cycle phase seen in microvasculature of the leg and macrovascular (BA) of the arm. Although arm microvascular function was unaltered by menstrual cycle phase in PMF, it was revealed to be significantly lower when compared with age-matched men highlighting a sex difference in vascular/blood flow regulation during small muscle mass exercise.
Hemodynamic data obtained during rest and exercise in 22 patients with aortic stenosis were analyzed. Mean aortic valve gradient for the group did not change significantly during exercise but there was large individual variability. Aortic valve flow increased during exercise in all but 2 patients. There was no correlation between change in gradient and change in flow during exercise. Although the mean calculated aortic valve area for the group did not change significantly during exercise, the calculated area was larger during exercise in most patients. Change in the calculated valve area correlated best with changes in aortic valve flow, left ventricular stroke work index, and the product of left ventricular systolic pressure and stroke volume. This suggests that in some patients there may be a dynamic component to aortic valve obstruction that may vary with changing hemodynamics.
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