Han MN, Kim JH, Choi SH. Evaluation of Biomechanical Properties and Morphometric Structures of the Trachea in Pigs and Rabbits.
In Vivo 2022;
36:1718-1725. [PMID:
35738586 DOI:
10.21873/invivo.12884]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/05/2022] [Revised: 05/27/2022] [Accepted: 05/31/2022] [Indexed: 11/10/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIM
Animals differ in the biochemical composition, attachments, and mechanical properties of tracheal cartilage. This study examined the biomechanical properties and morphological structure of the trachea of pigs, and rabbits as preclinical models.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The trachea in pigs and rabbits can be divided into four regions, cranial cervical, middle cervical, thoracic inlet, and intra-thoracic parts.
RESULTS
The total number of tracheal rings in pigs and rabbits was 32-35 and 34-38 rings, respectively. The pig bronchus first branches from the trachea, reaching the cranial lobe of the lungs before branching to the main bronchus, while the rabbit bronchus branched after the main bronchus. A comparison of the posterior region of the crosssectional trachea shows that the rabbit has a C-shape with cartilage connected to the tracheal muscle, and the pig has the tracheal muscle covered with cartilage. The trachea of pigs and rabbits decreased in tracheal thickness and size from the thoracic inlet toward the lungs. The stress-strain in the longitudinal and transverse tensile test was higher in rabbits than in pigs. The tensile stress of the four regions was significantly different in the transverse tensile test (p<0.001). In the bending test, more force was required to bend pig than rabbit tracheas. Microscopic and scanning electron microscopy showed no structural differences in tracheal cartilage between the two species.
CONCLUSION
These results suggest that there is great variation in morphology and physical properties of the trachea in pigs and rabbits. We found porcine tracheas have similar biomechanical properties to those of humans.
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