人类脑白质和脑干结构是否表现出方向依赖的机械行为?

Nina Reiter, Sophia Auer, Lucas Hoffmann, Lars Bräuer, Friedrich Paulsen, Silvia Budday
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于胼胝体和脑干在头部撞击时都容易受到弥漫性轴索损伤,因此对这些脑结构的力学行为建模具有很高的兴趣。近年来,不同版本的纤维增强材料模型被提出用于胼胝体和其他白质区域,以及脑干,尽管目前还没有就这些结构在机械载荷下是否表现出显著的方向依赖行为达成共识。在这里,我们提出了人类脑组织的第一个大应变,多模态实验研究,包括胼胝体和下脑干(延髓)沿着两个不同的方向进行测试。此外,我们将这两种结构与其他白质(辐射冠、小脑白质)和脑干结构(脑桥、中脑)进行比较,以突出它们的物质反应差异。循环压缩-拉伸和剪切试验揭示了胼胝体中具有统计学意义的方向依赖性材料行为。脑干的方向性差异没有统计学意义,也没有明确的方向性。结合组织学结果,我们的研究结果表明,白质结构的力学行为不仅受轴突直径、方向和密度的影响,还受细胞和束的结构组织(即聚集还是均匀分布)以及血管密度的影响。这些发现强调了对脑白质微观力学本构模型的需求,这些模型不仅仅包括嵌入在基质中的轴突。机械性头部损伤通常导致损伤,如人类大脑白质区域的弥漫性轴索损伤。因此,了解和预测这些区域的力学特性,以预防损伤和推进神经系统疾病的诊断和治疗策略具有很高的兴趣。关于人脑白质区域是否表现出各向异性、方向依赖的机械反应,一直存在争议。为了提供实验证据来最终回答这个问题,我们在这里提供了大应变、多模态的实验数据和具有代表性的人类大脑白质区域和脑干结构的组织学分析,包括对胼胝体和延髓(下脑干)的定向研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Do human brain white matter and brain stem structures show direction-dependent mechanical behavior?

Since the corpus callosum and the brain stem are both vulnerable to diffuse axonal injury during head impacts, there is a high interest in modeling the mechanical behavior of these brain structures. In recent years, different versions of fiber-reinforced material models have been proposed for the corpus callosum and other white matter regions, as well as for the brain stem, even though there is currently no consensus on whether those structures exhibit a significant direction-dependent behavior during mechanical loading. Here, we present the first large-strain, multimodal experimental study on human brain tissue that includes the corpus callosum and the lower brain stem (medulla oblongata) tested along two different directions. Additionally, we compare those two structures with other white matter (corona radiata, cerebellar white matter) and brain stem structures (pons, midbrain) to highlight differences in their material response. Cyclic compression-tension and shear tests reveal statistically significant direction-dependent material behavior in the corpus callosum. Directional differences in the brain stem are not statistically significant and do not indicate a clear directionality. Combined with histological findings, our results suggest that the mechanical behavior of white matter structures is influenced not only by axon caliber, orientation and density, but also by the architectural organization, i.e., clustering versus even distribution, of cells and tracts, and possibly vascular density. These findings highlight the need for micromechanical constitutive models for brain white matter that do not merely include axons embedded in a matrix. Statement of significance Mechanical head injuries often result in insults like diffuse axonal injury in white matter regions of the human brain. Therefore, there is a high interest in understanding and predicting the mechanical properties of those regions in order to prevent injury and advance diagnosis and treatment strategies of neurological disorders. There has been a long controversy regarding the question whether human brain white matter regions show an anisotropic, direction-dependent mechanical response. With the goal of providing experimental evidence to conclusively answer this question, we here present large-strain, multimodal experimental data and representative histological analyses of different human brain white matter regions and brain stem structures, including directional investigations for both the corpus callosum and the medulla oblongata (lower brain stem).

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