Print Email Facebook Twitter Tensile and Compressive Mechanical Behaviour of Human Blood Clot Analogues Title Tensile and Compressive Mechanical Behaviour of Human Blood Clot Analogues Author Cahalane, R.M.E. (Erasmus MC) de Vries, J.J. (Erasmus MC) de Maat, Moniek P.M. (Erasmus MC) van Gaalen, Kim (Erasmus MC) van Beusekom, Heleen M. (Erasmus MC) van der Lugt, Aad (Erasmus MC) Fereidoonnezhad, B.F. (TU Delft Medical Instruments & Bio-Inspired Technology) Akyildiz, A.C. (TU Delft Medical Instruments & Bio-Inspired Technology; Erasmus MC) Gijsen, F.J.H. (TU Delft Medical Instruments & Bio-Inspired Technology; Erasmus MC) Date 2023 Abstract Endovascular thrombectomy procedures are significantly influenced by the mechanical response of thrombi to the multi-axial loading imposed during retrieval. Compression tests are commonly used to determine compressive ex vivo thrombus and clot analogue stiffness. However, there is a shortage of data in tension. This study compares the tensile and compressive response of clot analogues made from the blood of healthy human donors in a range of compositions. Citrated whole blood was collected from six healthy human donors. Contracted and non-contracted fibrin clots, whole blood clots and clots reconstructed with a range of red blood cell (RBC) volumetric concentrations (5–80%) were prepared under static conditions. Both uniaxial tension and unconfined compression tests were performed using custom-built setups. Approximately linear nominal stress–strain profiles were found under tension, while strong strain-stiffening profiles were observed under compression. Low- and high-strain stiffness values were acquired by applying a linear fit to the initial and final 10% of the nominal stress–strain curves. Tensile stiffness values were approximately 15 times higher than low-strain compressive stiffness and 40 times lower than high-strain compressive stiffness values. Tensile stiffness decreased with an increasing RBC volume in the blood mixture. In contrast, high-strain compressive stiffness values increased from 0 to 10%, followed by a decrease from 20 to 80% RBC volumes. Furthermore, inter-donor differences were observed with up to 50% variation in the stiffness of whole blood clot analogues prepared in the same manner between healthy human donors. Subject Acute ischemic strokeCompositionExperimental testingHistologyMaterial behaviourMechanical thrombectomyThrombus To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:dc69f317-07d1-4092-b310-ebce012ae52c DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s10439-023-03181-6 ISSN 0090-6964 Source Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 51 (8), 1759-1768 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2023 R.M.E. Cahalane, J.J. de Vries, Moniek P.M. de Maat, Kim van Gaalen, Heleen M. van Beusekom, Aad van der Lugt, B.F. Fereidoonnezhad, A.C. Akyildiz, F.J.H. Gijsen Files PDF s10439_023_03181_6.pdf 3.17 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:dc69f317-07d1-4092-b310-ebce012ae52c/datastream/OBJ/view