RT Journal Article T1 High-Resolution Strain Measurement for Biomechanical Parameters Assessment in Native and Decellularized Porcine Vessels A1 Melchor, Juan A1 Soto, Juan M. A1 Lopez-Ruiz, Elena A1 Suarez, Javier A1 Jimenez, Gema A1 Antich, Cristina A1 Peran, Macarena A1 Marchal, Juan A. A1 Rus, Guillermo K1 Mechanical-properties K1 Tissue AB Decellularized vascular scaffolds are promising materials for vessel replacements. However, despite the natural origin of decellularized vessels, issues such as biomechanical incompatibility, immunogenicity risks, and the hazards of thrombus formation still need to be addressed. In this study, we assess the mechanical properties of two groups of porcine carotid blood vessels: (i) native arteries and (ii) decellularized arteries. The biomechanical properties of both groups (n = 10, sample size of each group) are determined by conducting uniaxial and circumferential tensile tests by using an ad hoc and lab-made device comprising a peristaltic pump that controls the load applied to the sample. This load is regularly incremented (8 grams per cycle with a pause of 20 seconds after each step) while keeping the vessels continuously hydrated. The strain is measured by an image cross-correlation technique applied on a high-resolution video. The mechanical testing analyses of the arteries revealed significant differences in burst pressure between the native (1345.08 +/- 96.58 mbar) and decellularized (1067.79 +/- 112.13 mbar) groups. Moreover, decellularized samples show a significantly lower maximum load at failure (15.78 +/- 0.79 N) in comparison with native vessels (19.42 +/- 0.80 N). Finally, the average ultimate circumferential tensile also changes between native (3.71 +/- 0.37 MPa) and decellularized (2.93 +/- 0.18 MPa) groups. This technique is able to measure the strain in the regime of large displacements and enables high-resolution image of the local strains, thus providing a valuable tool for characterizing several biomechanical parameters of the vessels also applicable to other soft tissue presenting hyperelastic behaviours. PB Hindawi ltd SN 1024-123X YR 2019 FD 2019-02-27 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/19074 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/19074 LA en NO Melchor, Juan, Soto, Juan M., López-Ruiz, Elena, Suarez, Javier, Jiménez, Gema, et al. High-Resolution Strain Measurement for Biomechanical Parameters Assessment in Native and Decellularized Porcine Vessels, Mathematical Problems in Engineering, 2019, 2402606, 14 pages, 2019 DS RISalud RD Apr 18, 2025