Abstract

While mechanical properties of the brain have been investigated thoroughly, the mechanical properties of human brain tumors rarely have been directly quantified due to the complexities of acquiring human tissue. Quantifying the mechanical properties of brain tumors is a necessary prerequisite, though, to identify appropriate materials for surgical tool testing and to define target parameters for cell biology and tissue engineering applications. Since characterization methods vary widely for soft biological and synthetic materials, here, we have developed a characterization method compatible with abnormally shaped human brain tumors, mouse tumors, animal tissue and common hydrogels, which enables direct comparison among samples. Samples were tested using a custom-built millimeter-scale indenter, and resulting force-displacement data is analyzed to quantify the steady-state modulus of each sample. We have directly quantified the quasi-static mechanical properties of human brain tumors with effective moduli ranging from 0.17–16.06 kPa for various pathologies. Of the readily available and inexpensive animal tissues tested, chicken liver (steady-state modulus 0.44 ± 0.13 kPa) has similar mechanical properties to normal human brain tissue while chicken crassus gizzard muscle (steady-state modulus 3.00 ± 0.65 kPa) has similar mechanical properties to human brain tumors. Other materials frequently used to mimic brain tissue in mechanical tests, like ballistic gel and chicken breast, were found to be significantly stiffer than both normal and diseased brain tissue. We have directly compared quasi-static properties of brain tissue, brain tumors, and common mechanical surrogates, though additional tests would be required to determine more complex constitutive models.

Highlights

  • Isolated human tissue samples are complicated to procure for a wide range of logistical and regulatory reasons [1,2]

  • Using our Steady-State Modulus (SSM) parameter, we compared the effective modulus of diseased brain tissue to normal mouse brain tissue (Fig 4)

  • With our custom indentation system, we quantified the steady-state modulus of many common mechanical brain surrogates as well as freshly isolated human brain tumors

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Summary

Introduction

Isolated human tissue samples are complicated to procure for a wide range of logistical and regulatory reasons [1,2]. Researchers rely on animal models and hydrogels to mimic the mechanical behavior of the brain for a variety of applications including high. Mechanical characterization of human brain tumors funded in part by the University of Florida Open Access Publishing Fund. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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