Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are increasingly thought to play important roles in arterial mechanics and mechanobiology. We recently suggested that these highly negatively charged molecules, well known for their important contributions to cartilage mechanics, can pressurize intralamellar units in elastic arteries via a localized swelling process and thereby impact both smooth muscle mechanosensing and structural integrity. In this paper, we report osmotic loading experiments on murine common carotid arteries that revealed different degrees and extents of transmural swelling. Overall geometry changed significantly with exposure to hypo-osmotic solutions, as expected, yet mean pressure-outer diameter behaviors remained largely the same. Histological analyses revealed further that the swelling was not always distributed uniformly despite being confined primarily to the media. This unexpected finding guided a theoretical study of effects of different distributions of swelling on the wall stress. Results suggested that intramural swelling can introduce highly localized changes in the wall mechanics that could induce differential mechanobiological responses across the wall. There is, therefore, a need to focus on local, not global, mechanics when examining issues such as swelling-induced mechanosensing.
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April 2015
Research-Article
Local Versus Global Mechanical Effects of Intramural Swelling in Carotid Arteries
T. A. Sorrentino,
T. A. Sorrentino
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
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L. Fourman,
L. Fourman
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
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J. Ferruzzi,
J. Ferruzzi
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
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K. S. Miller,
K. S. Miller
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
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J. D. Humphrey,
J. D. Humphrey
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
Vascular Biology and Therapeutics Program,
Yale School of Medicine
,New Haven, CT 06511
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S. Roccabianca
S. Roccabianca
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
e-mail: roccabis@egr.msu.edu
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
e-mail: roccabis@egr.msu.edu
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T. A. Sorrentino
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
L. Fourman
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
J. Ferruzzi
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
K. S. Miller
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
J. D. Humphrey
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
Vascular Biology and Therapeutics Program,
Yale School of Medicine
,New Haven, CT 06511
S. Roccabianca
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
e-mail: roccabis@egr.msu.edu
Yale University
,New Haven, CT 06511
e-mail: roccabis@egr.msu.edu
1Present address: Department of Mechanical Engineering, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48823.
2Corresponding author.
Manuscript received July 18, 2014; final manuscript received December 1, 2014; published online February 16, 2015. Assoc. Editor: Hai-Chao Han.
J Biomech Eng. Apr 2015, 137(4): 041008 (8 pages)
Published Online: April 1, 2015
Article history
Received:
July 18, 2014
Revision Received:
December 1, 2014
Online:
February 16, 2015
Citation
Sorrentino, T. A., Fourman, L., Ferruzzi, J., Miller, K. S., Humphrey, J. D., and Roccabianca, S. (April 1, 2015). "Local Versus Global Mechanical Effects of Intramural Swelling in Carotid Arteries." ASME. J Biomech Eng. April 2015; 137(4): 041008. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4029303
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