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Wideband MRE and static mechanical indentation of human liver specimen: Sensitivity of viscoelastic constants to the alteration of tissue structure in hepatic fibrosis.

Authors :
Reiter, Rolf
Freise, Christian
Jöhrens, Korinna
Kamphues, Carsten
Seehofer, Daniel
Stockmann, Martin
Somasundaram, Rajan
Asbach, Patrick
Samani, Abbas
Sack, Ingolf
Source :
Journal of Biomechanics. 2014, Vol. 47 Issue 7, p1665-1674. 10p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Despite the success of elastography in grading hepatic fibrosis by stiffness related noninvasive markers the relationship between viscoelastic constants in the liver and tissue structure remains unclear. We therefore studied the mechanical properties of 16 human liver specimens with different degrees of fibrosis, inflammation and steatosis by wideband magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) and static indentation experiments providing the specimens' static Young's modulus (E), dynamic storage modulus (G0) and dynamic loss modulus (G"). A frequency-independent shear modulus μ and a powerlaw exponent a were obtained by fitting G and G" using the two-parameter sprinpot model. The mechanical parameters were compared to the specimens' histology derived parameters such as degree of Fibrosis (F), inflammation score and fat score, amount of hydroxyproline (HYP) used for quantification of collagen, blood markers and presurgery in vivo function tests. The frequency averaged parameters G', G" and μ were significantly correlated with F (G': R=0.762, G": R=0.830; μ: R=0.744; all P < 0.01) and HYP (G': R=0.712; G": R=0.720; μ: R=0.731 ; all P < 0.01). The powerlaw exponent a displayed an inverse correlation with F (R = -0.590, P= 0.034) and a trend of inverse correlation with HYP (R = -0.470, P=0.089). The static Young's modulus E was less correlated with F (R=0.587, P=0.022) and not sensitive to HYP. Although inflammation was highly correlated with F (R = 0.773, P < 0.001), no interaction was discernable between inflammation and mechanical para-meters measured in this study. Other histological and blood markers as well as liver function test were correlated with neither F nor the measured mechanical parameters. In conclusion, viscoelastic constants measured by wideband MRE are highly sensitive to histologically proven fibrosis. Our results suggest that, in addition to the amount of connective tissue, subtle structural changes of the viscoelastic matrix determine the sensitivity of mechanical tissue properties to hepatic fibrosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219290
Volume :
47
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biomechanics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
95595878
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2014.02.034