4.5 Article

Early Atherosclerotic Changes in Coronary Arteries are Associated with Endothelium Shear Stress Contraction/Expansion Variability

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 49, Issue 9, Pages 2606-2621

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-021-02829-5

Keywords

Atherosclerosis; Wall shear stress; Computational fluid dynamics; Topological skeleton; Plaque progression; Topological shear variation index

Funding

  1. MIUR FISR [FISR2019_03221]
  2. European Research Council [310457]

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This study examines the impact of wall shear stress on coronary atherosclerosis development, revealing that high TSVI and low WSS are associated with increased wall thickness and predict thickening in the future. The variability of WSS contraction/expansion action and WSS magnitude play a role in different hemodynamic effects on endothelial cells, helping to identify WSS features leading to coronary atherosclerosis.
Although unphysiological wall shear stress (WSS) has become the consensus hemodynamic mechanism for coronary atherosclerosis, the complex biomechanical stimulus affecting atherosclerosis evolution is still undetermined. This has motivated the interest on the contraction/expansion action exerted by WSS on the endothelium, obtained through the WSS topological skeleton analysis. This study tests the ability of this WSS feature, alone or combined with WSS magnitude, to predict coronary wall thickness (WT) longitudinal changes. Nine coronary arteries of hypercholesterolemic minipigs underwent imaging with local WT measurement at three time points: baseline (T1), after 5.6 +/- 0.9 (T2), and 7.6 +/- 2.5 (T3) months. Individualized computational hemodynamic simulations were performed at T1 and T2. The variability of the WSS contraction/expansion action along the cardiac cycle was quantified using the WSS topological shear variation index (TSVI). Alone or combined, high TSVI and low WSS significantly co-localized with high WT at the same time points and were significant predictors of thickening at later time points. TSVI and WSS magnitude values in a physiological range appeared to play an atheroprotective role. Both the variability of the WSS contraction/expansion action and WSS magnitude, accounting for different hemodynamic effects on the endothelium, (1) are linked to WT changes and (2) concur to identify WSS features leading to coronary atherosclerosis.

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