Log on / register
BioMed Central home | Journals A-Z | Feedback | Support | My details
Open AccessResearch

A two-layered mechanical model of the rat esophagus. Experiment and theory

Yanhua Fan1 email, Hans Gregersen2,3,4 email and Ghassan S Kassab5 email

Institute of Experimental Clinical Research, Skejby Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark

Center for Biomechanics and Visceral Pain, Aalborg Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark

Center for Sensory-Motor Interaction, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark

Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway

Department of Biomedical Engineering, UC Irvine, Irvine, California

author email corresponding author email

BioMedical Engineering OnLine 2004, 3:40doi:10.1186/1475-925X-3-40

Published: 1 November 2004

Abstract

Background

The function of esophagus is to move food by peristaltic motion which is the result of the interaction of the tissue forces in the esophageal wall and the hydrodynamic forces in the food bolus. The structure of the esophagus is layered. In this paper, the esophagus is treated as a two-layered structure consisting of an inner collagen-rich submucosa layer and an outer muscle layer. We developed a model and experimental setup for determination of elastic moduli in the two layers in circumferential direction and related the measured elastic modulus of the intact esophagus to the elastic modulus computed from the elastic moduli of the two layers.

Methods

Inflation experiments were done at in vivo length and pressure-diameters relations were recorded for the rat esophagus. Furthermore, the zero-stress state was taken into consideration.

Results

The radius and the strain increased as function of pressure in the intact as well as in the individual layers of the esophagus. At pressures higher than 1.5 cmH2O the muscle layer had a larger radius and strain than the mucosa-submucosa layer. The strain for the intact esophagus and for the muscle layer was negative at low pressures indicating the presence of residual strains in the tissue. The stress-strain curve for the submucosa-mucosa layer was shifted to the left of the curves for the muscle layer and for the intact esophagus at strains higher than 0.3. The tangent modulus was highest in the submucosa-mucosa layer, indicating that the submucosa-mucosa has the highest stiffness. A good agreement was found between the measured elastic modulus of the intact esophagus and the elastic modulus computed from the elastic moduli of the two separated layers.


© 1999-2010 BioMed Central Ltd unless otherwise stated. Part of Springer Science+Business Media.