Despite their medical importance, rupture properties of ascending thoracic aortic aneurysms (ATAA) subjected to biaxial tension were inexistent in the literature. In order to address this lack, our group developed a novel methodology based on bulge inflation and full-field optical measurements. Here we report rupture properties obtained with this methodology on 31 patients. It is shown for the first time that rupture occurs when the stretch applied to ATAAs reaches the maximum extensibility of the tissue and that this maximum extensibility correlates strongly with the elastic properties. The outcome is a better detection of at-risk individuals for elective surgical repair.
An ascending thoracic aortic aneurysm (ATAA) is a serious medical condition which, more often than not, requires surgery. Aneurysm diameter is the primary clinical criterion for determining when surgical intervention is necessary but, biomechanical studies have suggested that the diameter criterion is insufficient. This manuscript presents a method for obtaining the patient specific wall stress distribution of the ATAA and the retrospective rupture risk for each patient. Five human ATAAs and the preoperative dynamic CT scans were obtained during elective surgeries to replace each patient's aneurysm with a synthetic graft. The material properties and rupture stress for each tissue sample were identified using bulge inflation tests. The dynamic CT scans were used to generate patient specific geometries for a finite element (FE) model of each patient's aneurysm. The material properties from the bulge inflation tests were implemented in the FE model and the wall stress distribution at four different pressures was estimated. Three different rupture risk assessments were compared: the maximum diameter, the rupture risk index, and the overpressure index. The peak wall stress values for the patients ranged from 28% to 94% of the ATAA's failure stress. The rupture risk and overpressure indices were both only weakly correlated with diameter (ρ=-0.29, both cases). In the future, we plan to conduct a large experimental and computational study that includes asymptomatic patients under surveillance, patients undergoing elective surgery, and patients who have experienced rupture or dissection to determine if the rupture risk index or maximum diameter can meaningfully differentiate between the groups.
We present a comprehensive and original framework for the biomechanical analysis of patients affected by ascending thoracic aorta aneurysm and aortic insufficiency. Our aim is to obtain crucial indications about the role played by deranged hemodynamics on the ATAAs risk of rupture. Computational fluid dynamics analysis was performed using patient-specific geometries and boundary conditions derived from 4D MRI. Blood flow helicity and wall shear stress descriptors were assessed. A bulge inflation test was carried out in vitro on the 4 ATAAs after surgical repair. The healthy volunteers showed no eccentric blood flow, a mean TAWSS of 1.5 ± 0.3 Pa and mean OSI of 0.325 ± 0.025. In 3 aneurismal patients, jet flow impingement on the aortic wall resulted in large TAWSS values and low OSI which were amplified by the AI degree. However, the tissue strength did not appear to be significantly reduced. The fourth patient, which showed the lowest TAWSS due to the absence of jet flow, had the smallest strength in vitro. Interestingly this patient presented a bovine arch abnormality. Jet flow impingement with high WSS values is frequent in ATAAs and our methodology seems to be appropriate for determining whether it may increase the risk of rupture or not.
Aortic dissection is the most common catastrophe of the thoracic aorta, with a very high rate of mortality. Type A dissection is often associated with an ascending thoracic aortic aneurysm (ATAA). However, it is widely acknowledged that the risk of type A dissection cannot be reliably predicted simply by measuring the ATAA diameter and there is a pressing need for more reliable risk predictors. It was previously shown that there is a significant correlation between a rupture criterion based on the ultimate stretch of the ATAA and the local extensional stiffness of the aorta. Therefore, reconstructing regional variations of the extensional stiffness across the aorta appears highly important. In this paper, we present a novel noninvasive inverse method to identify the patient-specific local extensional stiffness of aortic walls based on preoperative gated CT scans. Using these scans, a structural mesh is defined across the aorta with a set of nodes attached to the same material points at different time steps throughout the cardiac cycle. For each node, time variations of the position are analyzed using Fourier series, permitting the reconstruction of the local strain distribution (fundamental term). Relating these strains to tensions with the extensional stiffness, and writing the local equilibrium satisfied by the tensions, the local extensional stiffness is finally derived at every position. The methodology is applied onto the ascending and descending aorta of three patients. Interestingly, the regional distribution of identified stiffness properties appears heterogeneous across the ATAA. Averagely, the identified stiffness is also compared with values obtained using other nonlocal methodologies. The results support the possible noninvasive prediction of stretch-based rupture criteria in clinical practice using local stiffness reconstruction.
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