On the relationship between viscoelasticity and water diffusion in soft biological tissues

IF 9.4 1区 医学 Q1 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Jürgen 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
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引用次数: 0

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.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

软生物组织中粘弹性与水扩散之间的关系。
磁共振弹性成像(MRE)和弥散加权成像(DWI)是一种互补的成像技术,分别根据粘弹性和水的流动性检测疾病。然而,人们对粘弹性和水弥散之间的关系仍然知之甚少,这阻碍了 DWI-MRE 联合标记的临床应用。我们使用 DWI-MRE 研究了 129 种生物材料样本,包括原生和交联胶原蛋白、不同硫酸化水平的糖胺聚糖 (GAG)、胰腺和肝脏的脱细胞标本,所有样本都含有不同比例的固体组织或固体组分。我们根据固体和液体粘度这两个参数,建立了机械损失和组织-水流动性之间关系的理论框架。这些参数揭示了不同的 DWI-MRE 特性集群,分别表征了弱、中和强的水-网络相互作用。与水相互作用较弱的稀疏网络,如胶原蛋白或稀释的脱细胞组织,随着固体粘度的增加,水扩散的变化微乎其微。相反,具有较大固体成分的致密网络则表现出自由和受阻的水扩散,这取决于固体成分的极性。例如,极性和高度硫酸化的凝胶体以及原生软组织会阻碍水的扩散,尽管固体粘度相对较低。我们的研究结果表明,组织网络的两个基本特性--固体成分和网络极性--对生物组织中的固体和液体粘度有着至关重要的影响。由于临床 DWI 和 MRE 对这些粘度参数很敏感,我们在此提出的框架可用于检测诊断成像中的组织重塑和结构变化。意义说明:生物组织的粘弹性能为细胞和宿主基质的生命状态提供了大量信息。通过医学成像对粘弹性和水扩散进行联合测量,可敏感地反映组织的微观结构。然而,人们对粘弹性和水扩散之间的关系仍然知之甚少,这阻碍了将这些特性作为临床生物标记的充分利用。因此,我们分析了扩散加权成像(DWI)和磁共振弹性成像(MRE)可访问的参数空间,并为生物材料中水的流动性与力学参数之间的关系建立了一个理论框架。我们关于固体材料特性与微粒运动关系的理论可通过临床上使用的 MRE 和 DWI 转化为临床放射学。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Acta Biomaterialia
Acta Biomaterialia 工程技术-材料科学:生物材料
CiteScore
16.80
自引率
3.10%
发文量
776
审稿时长
30 days
期刊介绍: Acta Biomaterialia is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Elsevier. The journal was established in January 2005. The editor-in-chief is W.R. Wagner (University of Pittsburgh). The journal covers research in biomaterials science, including the interrelationship of biomaterial structure and function from macroscale to nanoscale. Topical coverage includes biomedical and biocompatible materials.
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