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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of 3-D collagen organization in stromal elasticity: a model based on X-ray diffraction data and second harmonic-generated images

TLDR
A continuum mechanics-based model of stromal elasticity is developed based on orientation information extracted and synthesized from both X-ray scattering studies and SHG imaging, and the significance of the 3-D lamella orientation in the mechanics of the human cornea is demonstrated.
Abstract
Examining the cross-section of the human cornea with second harmonic-generated (SHG) imaging shows that many lamellae do not lie parallel to the cornea's anterior surface but have inclined trajectories that take them through the corneal thickness with a depth-dependent distribution. A continuum mechanics-based model of stromal elasticity is developed based on orientation information extracted and synthesized from both X-ray scattering studies and SHG imaging. The model describes the effects of inclined lamella orientation by introducing a probability function that varies with depth through the stroma, which characterizes the range and distribution of lamellae at inclined angles. When combined with the preferred lamellar orientations found from X-ray scattering experiments, a fully 3-D representation of lamella orientation is achieved. Stromal elasticity is calculated by a weighted average of individual lamella properties based on the spatially varying 3-D orientation distribution. The model is calibrated with in vitro torsional shear experiments and in vivo indentation data and then validated with an in vitro inflation study. A quantitative explanation of the experimentally measured depth dependence of mechanical properties emerges from the model. The significance of the 3-D lamella orientation in the mechanics of the human cornea is demonstrated by investigating and contrasting the effects of previous modeling assumptions made on lamella orientation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Corneal structure and transparency

TL;DR: The current state of knowledge about the three-dimensional stromal architecture at the microscopic level is described, and about the control mechanisms at the nanoscopic level that lead to optical transparency are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanical characterization of keratoconus corneas ex vivo with Brillouin microscopy.

TL;DR: Brillouin imaging showed that the mechanical loss is primarily concentrated within the area of the keratoconic cone, and outside the cone, the Brillouin shift was comparable with that of healthy corneas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-Dimensional Distribution of Transverse Collagen Fibers in the Anterior Human Corneal Stroma

TL;DR: These results match the previous observation of a depth-dependent gradient in stromal collagen interconnectivity in the central cornea, and show that this gradient extends from the central Cornea to the limbus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Collagen structure and mechanical properties of the human sclera: Analysis for the effects of age

TL;DR: The objective of this study was to measure the collagen fiber structure and estimate the material properties of 7 human donor scleras, from age 53 to 91, by minimizing the difference between the experimental displacements and model predictions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Corneal biomechanics: a review

TL;DR: Different methods for the characterisation of corneal biomechanics are reviewed in detail, including those that are currently commercially available (Ocular Response Analyzer and CorVis ST) and the requirements for developing biomechanical models, with special emphasis on finite element modelling.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A new constitutive framework for arterial wall mechanics and a comparative study of material models

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a constitutive law for the description of the (passive) mechanical response of arterial tissue, where the artery is modeled as a thick-walled nonlinearly elastic circular cylindrical tube consisting of two layers corresponding to the media and adventitia.
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Hyperelastic modelling of arterial layers with distributed collagen fibre orientations

TL;DR: A structural continuum framework that is able to represent the dispersion of the collagen fibre orientation is developed and allows the development of a new hyperelastic free-energy function that is particularly suited for representing the anisotropic elastic properties of adventitial and intimal layers of arterial walls.
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Determining in vivo biomechanical properties of the cornea with an ocular response analyzer.

TL;DR: The corneal hysteresis biomechanical measure may prove valuable for qualification and predictions of outcomes of refractive surgery and in other cases in whichCorneal biomechanics are important.
Journal Article

The three-dimensional organization of collagen fibrils in the human cornea and sclera.

TL;DR: The organization of collagen fibrils in the human cornea and sclera was studied by scanning electron microscope, after digestion of cellular elements by sodium hydroxide, and by conventional transmission electron microscopy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanical properties of keratoconus and normal corneas

TL;DR: The uniaxial tensile strength was determined for six keratoconus and seven normal corneas and no difference was found in the concentration of uronic acid in the two groups.
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