An investigation of regional variations in the biaxial mechanical properties and stress relaxation behaviors of porcine atrioventricular heart valve leaflets
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Abstract
The facilitation of proper blood flow through the heart depends on proper function
of heart valve components, and alterations to any component can lead to heart disease
or failure. Comprehension of these valvular diseases is reliant on thorough characterization
of healthy heart valve structures for use in computational models. Previously, computational
models have treated these leaflet structures as a structurally and mechanically homogenous
material, which may not be an accurate description of leaflet mechanical response.
In this study, we aimed to characterize the mechanics of the heart valve leaflet as
a structurally heterogenous material. Specifically, porcine mitral valve and tricuspid
valve anterior leaflets were sectioned into six regions and biaxial mechanical testing
with various loading ratios and stress-relaxation test were performed on each regional
tissue sample. Three main findings from this study were summarized as follows: (i)
the central regions of the leaflet had a more anisotropic nature than edge regions,
(ii) the mitral valve anterior leaflet was more extensible in regions closer to the
annulus, and (iii) there was variance in the stress-relaxation behavior among all
six regions, with mitral valve leaflet tissue regions exhibiting a greater decay than
the tricuspid valve regions. This study presents a novel investigation of the regional
variations in the heart valve biomechanics that has not been comprehensively examined.
Our results thus allow for a refinement of computational models for more accurately
predicting diseased or surgically-intervened condition, where tissue heterogeneity
plays an essential role in the heart valve function.