Characterisation of human posterior rectus sheath reveals mechanical and structural anisotropy

Thomas Whitehead-Clarke*, Christopher Brown, Geetika Ali, Vivek Mudera, Claire Smith, Alvena Kureshi

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background

Our work aims to investigate the mechanical properties of the human posterior rectus sheath in terms of its ultimate tensile stress, stiffness, thickness and anisotropy. It also aims to assess the collagen fibre organisation of the posterior rectus sheath using Second-Harmonic Generation microscopy.
Methods

For mechanical analysis, twenty-five fresh-frozen samples of posterior rectus sheath were taken from six different cadaveric donors. They underwent uniaxial tensile stress testing until rupture either in the transverse (n = 15) or longitudinal (n = 10) plane. The thickness of each sample was also recorded using digital callipers. On a separate occasion, ten posterior rectus sheath samples and three anterior rectus sheath samples underwent microscopy and photography to assess collagen fibre organisation.

Findings

samples had a mean ultimate tensile stress of 7.7 MPa (SD 4.9) in the transverse plane and 1.2 MPa (SD 0.8) in the longitudinal plane (P < 0.01). The same samples had a mean Youngs modulus of 11.1 MPa (SD 5.0) in the transverse plane and 1.7 MPa (SD 1.3) in the longitudinal plane (P < 0.01). The mean thickness of the posterior rectus sheath was 0.51 mm (SD 0.13). Transversely aligned collagen fibres could be identified within the posterior sheath tissue using Second-Harmonic Generation microscopy.

Interpretation

The posterior rectus sheath displays mechanical and structural anisotropy with greater tensile stress and stiffness in the transverse plane compared to the longitudinal plane. The mean thickness of this layer is around 0.51 mm – consistent with other studies. The tissue is constructed of transversely aligned collagen fibres that are visible using Second-Harmonic Generation microscopy.
Original languageEnglish
Article number105989
Number of pages7
JournalClinical Biomechanics
Volume106
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 May 2023

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