Abstract
In clinical practice, plastic surgeons are often faced with large skin defects that are difficult to close primarily. Management of large skin wounds e.g. burns or traumatic lacerations requires knowledge of skin biomechanic properties. Research into skin microstructural adaptation to mechanical deformation has only been performed using static regimes due to technical limitations. Here, we combine uniaxial stretch tests with fast second harmonic generation imaging and we apply this for the first time to investigate dynamic collagen rearrangement in reticular human dermis.Ex vivohuman skin from the abdomen and upper thigh was simultaneously uniaxially stretched while either periodically visualizing 3D reorganization, or visualizing 2D changes in real time. We determined collagen alignment via orientation indices and found pronounced variability across samples. Comparing mean orientation indices at the different stages of the stress strain curves (toe, heel, linear) showed a significant increase in collagen alignment during the linear part of the mechanical response. We conclude that fast SHG imaging during uni-axial extension is a promising research tool for future studies on skin biomechanic properties.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 035033 |
Journal | Biomedical physics & engineering express |
Volume | 9 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 25 Apr 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Creative Commons Attribution license.Funding
This project was funded by Health∼Holland and the Dutch Burn Foundation under the TKI program project numer LSMH16051-SGF.
Funders | Funder number |
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Dutch Burn Foundation | LSMH16051-SGF |
Keywords
- Humans
- Skin
- Collagen
- Dermis
- Biomechanical Phenomena