Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
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Biaxial mechanical behavior of bovine saphenous venous valve leaflets.

Chronic venous disease is caused by chronic venous insufficiency (CVI), which results in significant symptoms such as venous ulcers, ankle eczema, leg swelling, etc. Venous valve incompetence is a major cause of CVI. When the valves of veins in the leg become incompetent (i.e., do not close properly), blood is able to flow backwards (i.e., reflux), which results in blood pooling in the lower extremities, distal venous hypertension, and CVI. Current clinical therapies, such as surgical venous valve reconstruction and bioprosthetic venous valve replacement, are highly invasive and only moderately successful. This is due, in part, to the scanty information available about venous valve leaflet structure and mechanical properties. To date, only one previous study by our research group has reported on the mechanical properties of venous valve leaflet tissue, and specifically in the case of jugular vein valves. In this study, we conducted equibiaxial tensile tests on bovine saphenous vein valve leaflet tissues to better understand their nonlinear, anisotropic mechanical behavior. By stretching the valvular tissues to 60% strain in both the circumferential and radial directions, we generated stress-strain curves for proximal (i.e., those closest to the heart) and distal (i.e., those furthest from the heart) valve leaflets. Histology and collagen assays were also conducted to study corresponding leaflet microstructures and the biochemical properties of the tissues. Results showed: (1) saphenous venous valve tissues possessed overall anisotropic properties. The tissues were stiffer in the circumferential direction than in the radial direction (p<0.01), and (2) saphenous venous valve tissues from the proximal end showed nonlinear isotropic mechanical properties, while those from the distal end showed nonlinear anisotropic mechanical properties. (3) Distal saphenous venous valve tissues appeared to be stiffer than proximal ones in the circumferential direction, p=0.04 (i.e., inter-valvular variability), and (4) the collagen concentration showed a decreasing trend from the proximal to the distal end. This study focuses on highly relevant animal (bovine) tissues to develop test protocols, establish biomechanical structure-function correlations, and to provide data critical to the design of clinical prosthetic venous valves. To the best of the author's knowledge, this is the first study reporting the biaxial mechanical properties of saphenous venous valve leaflet tissues and thus contributes toward refining our collective understanding of valvular tissue biomechanics.

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