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Published Online
on July 23, 2009

Stroke. 2009
Published online before print July 23, 2009, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.109.558676
A more recent version of this article appeared on October 1, 2009
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*Carotid Artery Disease
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Submitted on May 23, 2009
Accepted on June 9, 2009

Sites of Rupture in Human Atherosclerotic Carotid Plaques Are Associated With High Structural Stresses. An In Vivo MRI-Based 3D Fluid-Structure Interaction Study

Dalin Tang PhD*; Zhongzhao Teng PhD; Gador Canton PhD; Chun Yang MS; Marina Ferguson BS; Xueying Huang PhD; Jie Zheng PhD; Pamela K. Woodard MD; and Chun Yuan PhD

From the Mathematical Sciences Department (D.T., Z.T., X.H.), Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Mass; the Department of Radiology (G.C., M.F., C.Y.), University of Washington, Seattle; the School of Mathematics (C.Y.), Beijing Normal University, China; and Mallinkcrodt Institute of Radiology (J.Z., P.K.W.), Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dtang{at}wpi.edu.

Background and Purpose—It has been hypothesized that high structural stress in atherosclerotic plaques at critical sites may contribute to plaque disruption. To test that hypothesis, 3D fluid-structure interaction models were constructed based on in vivo MRI data of human atherosclerotic carotid plaques to assess structural stress behaviors of plaques with and without rupture.

Methods—In vivo MRI data of carotid plaques from 12 patients scheduled for endarterectomy were acquired for model reconstruction. Histology confirmed that 5 of the 12 plaques had rupture. Plaque wall stress (PWS) and flow maximum shear stress were extracted from all nodal points on the lumen surface of each plaque for analysis. A critical PWS (maximum of PWS values from all possible vulnerable sites) was determined for each plaque.

Results—Mean PWS from all ulcer nodes in ruptured plaques was 86% higher than that from all nonulcer nodes (123.0 versus 66.3 kPa, P<0.0001). Mean flow maximum shear stress from all ulcer nodes in ruptured plaques was 170% higher than that from all nonulcer nodes (38.9 versus 14.4 dyn/cm2, P<0.0001). Mean critical PWS from the 5 ruptured plaques was 126% higher than that from the 7 nonruptured ones (247.3 versus 108 kPa, P=0.0016 using log transformation).

Conclusion—The results of this study show that plaques with prior ruptures are associated with higher critical stress conditions, both at ulcer sites and when compared with nonruptured plaques. With further validations, plaque stress analysis may provide additional stress indicators helpful for image-based plaque vulnerability assessment.


Key words: carotid artery • atherosclerosis • MRI • plaque rupture • fluid structure interaction