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Diameter-dependent Axial Prestretch of Porcine Coronary Arteries and Veins

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Date 2011 Dec 14
PMID 22162531
Citations 8
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Abstract

The pressure-diameter relation (PDR) and the wall strain of coronary blood vessels have important implications for coronary blood flow and arthrosclerosis, respectively. Previous studies have shown that these mechanical quantities are significantly affected by the axial stretch of the vessels. The objective of this study was to measure the physiological axial stretch in the coronary vasculature; i.e., from left anterior descending (LAD) artery tree to coronary sinus vein and to determine its effect on the PDR and hence wall stiffness. Silicone elastomer was perfused through the LAD artery and coronary sinus trees to cast the vessels at the physiologic pressure. The results show that the physiological axial stretch exists for orders 4 to 11 (> 24 μm in diameter) arteries and orders -4 to -12 (>38 μm in diameter) veins but vanishes for the smaller vessels. Statistically, the axial stretch is higher for larger vessels and is higher for arteries than veins. The axial stretch λ(z) shows a linear variation with the order number (n) as: λ(z) = 0.062n + 0.75 (R(2) = 0.99) for artery and λ(z) = -0.029n + 0.89 (R(2) = 0.99) for vein. The mechanical analysis shows that the axial stretch significantly affects the PDR of the larger vessels. The circumferential stretch/strain was found to be significantly higher for the epicardial arteries (orders 9-11), which are free of myocardium constraint, than the intramyocardial arteries (orders 4-8). These findings have fundamental implications for coronary blood vessel mechanics.

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