Medial collagen organization in human arteries of the heart and brain by polarized light microscopy.

The mechanical properties of collagen as a biopolymer ensures that collagen has a significant influence on the mechanical behavior of the host tissue. Structural organization is a key to that influence. We have assessed this relationship quantitatively in the tunica media of arteries from the heart and brain, using the polarizing light microscope and Universal stage. Arteries from 22 autopsies were isolated, cannulated and fixed with 10% buffered formalin, at a distending pressure spanning normal values in vivo. We prepared the tissue for light microscopy, with paraffin embedding, sectioning at 7 microns, and staining with picrosirius red to enhance the natural birefringence of medial collagen. Individual measurements, 30 to 50 per arterial section, referenced against the central axis of the vessel segment, revealed a coherent organization, with an average orientation which was within 1 to 2 degrees of being perfectly concentric for all artery segments. Analysis was done with Lambert projections and circular statistics. We calculated the circular standard deviation, which was 5.2 degrees for 27 brain arteries (S.D. 1.9 degrees) and 5.6 degrees (S.D. 2.1 degrees), for 5 coronary arteries sectioned at less than 15 degrees. Our interpretation is that medial collagen can be strained even though highly aligned, revealing a mechanical property which contrasts that of type I collagen.

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