急性筋膜间室综合征动物模型的建立和力学特性。

Carolina Tacchella, Sara Medina-Lombardero, R Eddie Clutton, Graeme McLeod, Yuhang Chen, Michael Crichton
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引用次数: 0

摘要

急性筋膜室综合征(ACS)是肢体创伤后发生的一种骨科急症,其中肌肉间室压力增加会扰乱血液流动,有神经和肌肉损伤的风险。及时诊断对于避免永久性伤害至关重要,但目前的方法要么是侵入性的,要么是昂贵的,要么是主观的。金标准仍然是侵入性室内压(IComP)测量,其他方法缺乏足够的证据来取代它。本研究提出了两种机械工具-机械压痕和基于图像的应变映射-作为ACS评估的简化方法。我们的工作首先建立了猪ACS模型,包括在阑尾骨骼的选定肌肉中进行室内注射和压力测量。IComP可以根据需要在0 - 40 mmHg(超过30 mmHg的诊断阈值)之间进行调整。通过建立一致的ACS动物模型,我们试图确定机械方法是否可以测量皮肤表面的内肌压力变化。使用定制的手持式压头,我们检查了IComP操作期间覆盖肌肉的皮肤。虽然我们观察到从压痕力-位移曲线中提取的力学模量发生了一些变化,但这种方法改变压力时没有统计学差异。然后,我们使用单相机数字图像相关(DIC),显示随着内部压力的增加,相应的表面皮肤应变增加。在30毫米汞柱时,皮肤达到约1.5%的平均应变,尽管由于肌肉中压力分布不均匀,局部应变较高(压痕结果如此多变的一个原因)。因此,这种方法在我们的模型中为ACS提供了一个非侵入性的诊断阈值,并具有在人类患者中临床应用的潜力。意义声明:在本研究中,我们建立了猪急性室室综合征(ACS)模型,以评估在室内压力(IComP)升高下皮肤和肌肉的机械反应。我们开发并测试了两种非侵入性诊断方法——机械压痕和单相机数字图像相关(DIC)——来评估皮肤表面的内部压力变化。压痕法由于压力分布不均匀而表现出可变性,而DIC方法显示出IComP增加与表面应变之间的明确关系,确定了30 mmHg下约1.5%应变的诊断阈值。这些发现为开发非侵入性ACS诊断工具提供了基础,这些工具使用组织的机械特性作为健康生物标志物(例如,可穿戴传感器),为简化和具有成本效益的临床应用提供了潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Development and mechanical characterisation of an animal model of acute compartment syndrome.

Acute compartment syndrome (ACS) is an orthopaedic emergency that occurs after limb trauma, where increased pressure in muscle compartments disrupts blood flow, risking nerve and muscle damage. Timely diagnosis is essential to avoid permanent harm, but current methods are either invasive, expensive, or subjective. The gold standard remains invasive intracompartmental pressure (IComP) measurement, with other approaches lacking enough evidence to replace it. This study proposes two mechanical tools - mechanical indentation and image-based strain mapping - as simplified methods for ACS assessment. Our work started by establishing a porcine model of ACS, involving intracompartmental gelofusine infusion and pressure measurement in selected muscles of the appendicular skeleton. The IComP could then be adjucted as required from 0 - 40 mmHg (which exceeds the diagnostic threshold of 30 mmHg). With a consistent animal model of ACS, we sought to identify if mechanical methods could measure the internal muscle pressure changes from the surface of the skin. Using a custom-made handheld indenter, we examined the skin overlying muscles during IComP manipulations. Whilst we observed some changes in the mechanical moduli extracted from the indentation force-displacement curves, there was no statistical difference in this method changing pressure. We then used a single-camera digital image correlation (DIC), which showed that as internal pressure increased, corresponding surface skin strains increased. At 30 mmHg the skin reached an average strain of approximately 1.5% although local strains were higher due to an uneven distribution of pressure in the muscle (one reason for the indenter results being so variable). This approach therefore provides a non-invasive diagnostic threshold for ACS in our model and has the potential for clinical use in human patients. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: In this study, we established a porcine model of acute compartment syndrome (ACS) to evaluate the mechanical response of skin and muscle under increased intracompartmental pressure (IComP). We developed and tested two non-invasive diagnostic approaches-mechanical indentation and single-camera digital image correlation (DIC)-to assess internal pressure changes from the skin surface. While the indentation method exhibited variability due to uneven pressure distribution, the DIC approach demonstrated a clear relationship between increased IComP and surface strain, identifying a diagnostic threshold of approximately 1.5% strain at 30 mmHg. These findings provide a foundation for the development of non-invasive ACS diagnostic tools that use the mechanical properties of the tissue as a health biomarker (e.g., wearable sensors), offering potential for simplified and cost-effective clinical application.

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