Open Access
1 January 2010 Linking optics and mechanics in an in vivo model of airway fibrosis and epithelial injury
Christopher B. Raub, Sari B. Mahon, Navneet Narula M.D., Bruce Jason Tromberg, Matthew Brenner M.D., Steven C. George M.D.
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Chronic mucosal and submucosal injury can lead to persistent inflammation and tissue remodeling. We hypothesized that microstructural and mechanical properties of the airway wall could be derived from multiphoton images. New Zealand White rabbits were intubated, and the tracheal epithelium gently denuded every other day for five days (three injuries). Three days following the last injury, the tracheas were excised for multiphoton imaging, mechanical compression testing, and histological analysis. Multiphoton imaging and histology confirm epithelial denudation, mucosal ulceration, subepithelial thickening, collagen deposition, immune cell infiltration, and a disrupted elastin network. Elastase removes the elastin network and relaxes the collagen network. Purified collagenase removes epithelium with subtle subepithelial changes. Young's modulus [(E) measured in kiloPascal] was significantly elevated for the scrape injured (9.0±3.2) trachea, and both collagenase (2.6±0.4) and elastase (0.8±0.3) treatment significantly reduced E relative to control (4.1±0.7). E correlates strongly with second harmonic generation (SHG) signal depth decay for enzyme-treated and control tracheas (R2=0.77), but not with scrape-injured tracheas. We conclude that E of subepithelial connective tissue increases on repeated epithelial wounding, due in part to changes in elastin and collagen microstructure and concentration. SHG depth decay is sensitive to changes in extracellular matrix content and correlates with bulk Young's modulus.
©(2010) Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Christopher B. Raub, Sari B. Mahon, Navneet Narula M.D., Bruce Jason Tromberg, Matthew Brenner M.D., and Steven C. George M.D. "Linking optics and mechanics in an in vivo model of airway fibrosis and epithelial injury," Journal of Biomedical Optics 15(1), 015004 (1 January 2010). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3322296
Published: 1 January 2010
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Cited by 24 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Second-harmonic generation

Collagen

Tissues

Injuries

Mechanics

Image segmentation

In vivo imaging

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