• Biomech Model Mechanobiol · Dec 2020

    Collagen fibre orientation in human bridging veins.

    • Markos Kapeliotis, Rebeca Alejandra Gavrila Laic, Alvaro Jorge Peñas, Jos Vander Sloten, Pieter Vanden Berghe, Nele Famaey, and Bart Depreitere.
    • Biomechanics Section, KU Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 300 box 2419, 3001, Leuven, Belgium. markos.kapeliotis@kuleuven.be.
    • Biomech Model Mechanobiol. 2020 Dec 1; 19 (6): 2455-2489.

    AbstractBridging veins (BVs) drain the blood from the cerebral cortex into dural sinuses. BVs have one end attached to the brain and the other to the superior sagittal sinus (SSS), which is attached to the skull. Relative movement between these two structures can cause BV to rupture producing acute subdural haematoma, a head injury with a mortality rate between 30 and 90%. A clear understanding of the BVs microstructure is required to increase the biofidelity of BV models when simulating head impacts. Twelve fresh BV samples draining in the superior sagittal sinus (SSS) from a single human cadaver were cut open along their length and placed on an inverted multiphoton microscope. To ensure that the BVs were aligned with the axial direction an in-house built, uniaxial tension set-up was used. Two scans were performed per sample. Before the first scan, a minor displacement was applied to align the tissue; then, a second scan was taken applying 50% strain. Each BV was scanned for a length of 5 mm starting from the drainage site into the SSS. Imaging was performed on a Zeiss LSM780 microscope with an 25[Formula: see text] water immersion objective (NA 0.8), coupled to a tunable MaiTai DS (Spectraphysics) pulsed laser with the wavelength set at 850 nm. Second harmonic and fluorescence signals were captured in forward and backward direction on binary GaAsP (BiG) detectors and stored as four colour Z-stacks. Prior to the calculation of the local orientations, acquired Z-stacks were denoised and enhanced to highlight fibrillar structures from the background. Then, for each Z-plane of the stack, the ImageJ plugin OrientationJ was used to extract the local 2D orientations of the fibres based on structure tensors. Two kinds of collagen architectures were seen. The most common (8[Formula: see text]12 samples) was single layered and had a uniform distribution of collagen. The less common (4[Formula: see text]12 samples) had 2 layers and 7 to 34 times thicker collagen bundles on the outer layer. Fibre angle analysis showed that collagen was oriented mainly along the axial direction of the vessel. The von Mises fittings showed that in order to describe the fibre distribution 3 components were needed with mean angles [Formula: see text] at [Formula: see text] 0.35, 0.21, [Formula: see text] 0.02 rad or [Formula: see text] 20.2[Formula: see text], 12.1[Formula: see text], [Formula: see text] 1.2[Formula: see text] relative to the vessel's axial direction which was also the horizontal scan direction.

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