Journal Article10.1016/j.actbio.2024.05.007
On the relationship between viscoelasticity and water diffusion in soft biological tissues.
Jurgen Braun,Johannes Bernarding,Joachim Snellings,Tom Meyer,Pedro Augusto Dantas de Moraes,Yasmine Safraou,Rebecca G Wells,Jing Guo,Heiko Tzschätzsch,Andreas Zappe,Kevin Pagel,Igor M. Sauer,Karl H. Hillebrandt,Ingolf Sack +13 more
2
TL;DR: Researchers investigated the relationship between viscoelasticity and water diffusion in soft biological tissues using magnetic resonance elastography and diffusion-weighted imaging, developing a theoretical framework to predict tissue behavior based on solid and fluid viscosity parameters.
read more
Abstract: Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) are complementary imaging techniques that detect disease based on viscoelasticity and water mobility, respectively. However, the relationship between viscoelasticity and water diffusion is still poorly understood, hindering the clinical translation of combined DWI-MRE markers. We used DWI-MRE to study 129 biomaterial samples including native and cross-linked collagen, glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) with different sulfation levels, and decellularized specimens of pancreas and liver, all with different proportions of solid tissue, or solid fractions. We developed a theoretical framework of the relationship between mechanical loss and tissue-water mobility based on two parameters, solid and fluid viscosity. These parameters revealed distinct DWI-MRE property clusters characterizing weak, moderate, and strong water-network interactions. Sparse networks interacting weakly with water, such as collagen or diluted decellularized tissue, resulted in marginal changes in water diffusion over increasing solid viscosity. In contrast, dense networks with larger solid fractions exhibited both free and hindered water diffusion depending on the polarity of the solid components. For example, polar and highly sulfated GAGs as well as native soft tissues hindered water diffusion despite relatively low solid viscosity. Our results suggest that two fundamental properties of tissue networks, solid fraction and network polarity, critically influence solid and fluid viscosity in biological tissues. Since clinical DWI and MRE are sensitive to these viscosity parameters, the framework we present here can be used to detect tissue remodeling and architectural changes in the setting of diagnostic imaging. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: The viscoelastic properties of biological tissues provide a wealth of information on the vital state of cells and host matrix. Combined measurement of viscoelasticity and water diffusion by medical imaging is sensitive to tissue microarchitecture. However, the relationship between viscoelasticity and water diffusion is still poorly understood, hindering full exploitation of these properties as a combined clinical biomarker. Therefore, we analyzed the parameter space accessible by diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) and developed a theoretical framework for the relationship between water mobility and mechanical parameters in biomaterials. Our theory of solid material properties related to particle motion can be translated to clinical radiology using clinically established MRE and DWI.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
The Networking Brain: How Extracellular Matrix, Cellular Networks, and Vasculature Shape the In Vivo Mechanical Properties of the Brain
Judith Bergs,Anna S. Morr,Rafaela V. Silva,Carmen Infante‐Duarte,Ingolf Sack +4 more
TL;DR: The mechanical properties of the brain are influenced by cellular and vascular networks, extracellular matrix, and vasculature. MRE studies have shown that abnormal processes lead to tissue softening while neuronal proliferation and network formation result in brain stiffening.
4
Pulsed magnetomotive ultrasound for viscoelastic characterization of soft tissues during magnetic hyperthermia
Jose E. Freire,David A. Collazos-Burbano,Joao H. Uliana,Nicholas Zufelato,Antonio. A. O. Carneiro,Paul L. Carson,Theo Z. Pavan,Jose Eduardo Freire,David Alejandro Collazos Burbano,João Henrique Uliana,Nicholas Zufelato,Antonio Adilton Oliveira Carneiro,Théo Zeferino Pavan +12 more
TL;DR: This study combines magnetic hyperthermia with magnetomotive ultrasound to quantify viscoelastic changes in soft tissues, demonstrating the potential for real-time monitoring and treatment effects in oncology, and identifying elastic and viscous components as suitable biomarkers.
References
•Book
Magnetic Resonance Elastography: Physical Background and Medical Applications
Sebastian Hirsch,Ingolf Sack,Jürgen Braun +2 more
- 20 Mar 2017
TL;DR: Clinical and research applications of magnetic resonance elastography include staging of liver fibrosis, assessment of tumor stiffness and investigation of neurodegenerative diseases.
118
Tissue mechanics and adhesion during embryo development.
TL;DR: Attempts to develop predictive models of adhesion that can be used to interpret experiments and guide future efforts to control and direct the process of tissue self-assembly during development are reviewed.
75
Magnetic resonance elastography from fundamental soft-tissue mechanics to diagnostic imaging
TL;DR: Beyond stiffness, measurement of viscosity provides a rich, still widely unexplored, source of image contrast in MRE that is related to intrinsic mechanical friction and the fluid behaviour of soft tissues.
70
Collagen networks determine viscoelastic properties of connective tissues yet do not hinder diffusion of the aqueous solvent.
Frank Sauer,Linda Oswald,Angela Ariza de Schellenberger,Heiko Tzschätzsch,Felix Schrank,Tony Fischer,Jürgen Braun,Claudia Tanja Mierke,Rustem Valiullin,Ingolf Sack,Josef A. Käs +10 more
TL;DR: The insensitivity of MR based diffusion measurements to collagen hydrogels of different cross-linking states alludes that congeneric collagen structures in connective tissues do not hinder extracellular diffusive water transport and the glutaraldehyde induced rigorous changes in viscoelastic properties indicate that intrafibrillar dissipation is the dominant mode of viscous dissipation in collagen-dominated connective tissue.
Porcine liver decellularization under oscillating pressure conditions: a technical refinement to improve the homogeneity of the decellularization process.
Benjamin Struecker,Karl H. Hillebrandt,Robert Voitl,Antje Butter,Rosa Schmuck,Anja Reutzel-Selke,Dominik Geisel,Korinna Joehrens,Philipp A Pickerodt,Nathanael Raschzok,Gero Puhl,Peter Neuhaus,Johann Pratschke,Igor M. Sauer +13 more
TL;DR: An accelerated (7 h overall perfusion time) and effective protocol for human-scale liver decellularization by pressure-controlled perfusion with 1% Triton X-100 and 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate via the hepatic artery and portal vein is presented.
68