Residual strain in rat left ventricle.

JH Omens, YC Fung - Circulation research, 1990 - Am Heart Assoc
JH Omens, YC Fung
Circulation research, 1990Am Heart Assoc
Residual stress in an organ is defined as the stress that remains when all external loads are
removed. Residual stress has generally been ignored in published papers on left ventricular
wall stress. To take residual stress into account in the analysis of stress distributions in a
beating heart, one must first measure the residual strain in the no-load state of the heart.
Residual strains in equatorial cross-sectional rings (2-3 mm thick) of five potassium-arrested
rat left ventricles were measured. The effects of friction and external loading were reduced …
Residual stress in an organ is defined as the stress that remains when all external loads are removed. Residual stress has generally been ignored in published papers on left ventricular wall stress. To take residual stress into account in the analysis of stress distributions in a beating heart, one must first measure the residual strain in the no-load state of the heart. Residual strains in equatorial cross-sectional rings (2-3 mm thick) of five potassium-arrested rat left ventricles were measured. The effects of friction and external loading were reduced by submersing the specimen in fluid, and a hypothermic, hyperkalemic arresting solution containing nifedipine and EGTA was used to delay the onset of ischemic contracture. Stainless steel microspheres (60-100 microns) were lightly imbedded on the surface of the slices, and the coordinates of the microspheres were digitized from photographs taken before and after a radial cut was made through the left ventricular free wall. Two-dimensional strains computed from the deformation of a slice after one radial cut were defined as the residual strains in that slice. It was found that the distributions of the principal residual stretch ratios were asymmetric with respect to the radial cut: in areas where substantial transmural strain gradients existed, the distributions of strain components were different on the two sides of the radial cut. A second radial cut produced deformations significantly smaller than those produced from the first radial cut. Hence, a slice with one radial cut may be considered stress free.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Am Heart Assoc