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Featured researches published by Paul Deegan.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2016

IN SITU LONGITUDINAL PRE-STRETCH IN THE HUMAN FEMOROPOPLITEAL ARTERY

Alexey Kamenskiy; Andreas Seas; Grant Bowen; Paul Deegan; Anastasia Desyatova; Nick Bohlim; William Poulson; Jason N. MacTaggart

UNLABELLED In situ longitudinal (axial) pre-stretch (LPS) plays a fundamental role in the mechanics of the femoropopliteal artery (FPA). It conserves energy during pulsation and prevents buckling of the artery during limb movement. We investigated how LPS is affected by demographics and risk factors, and how these patient characteristics associate with the structural and physiologic features of the FPA. LPS was measured in n=148 fresh human FPAs (14-80 years old). Mechanical properties were characterized with biaxial extension and histopathological characteristics were quantified with Verhoeff-Van Gieson Staining. Constitutive modeling was used to calculate physiological stresses and stretches which were then analyzed in the context of demographics, risk factors and structural characteristics. Age had the strongest negative effect (r=-0.812, p<0.01) on LPS and could alone explain 66% of LPS variability. Male gender, higher body mass index, hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, dyslipidemia and tobacco use had negative effects on LPS, but only the effect of tobacco was not associated with aging. FPAs with less pre-stretch had thicker medial layers, but thinner intramural elastic fibers with less dense and more fragmented external elastic laminae. Elastin degradation was associated with decreased physiological tethering force and longitudinal stress, while circumferential stress remained constant. FPA wall pathology was negatively associated with LPS (r=-0.553, p<0.01), but the effect was due primarily to aging. LPS in the FPA may serve as an energy reserve for adaptive remodeling. Reduction of LPS due to degradation and fragmentation of intramural longitudinal elastin during aging can be accelerated in tobacco users. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE This work studies in situ longitudinal pre-stretch (LPS) in the human femoropopliteal artery. LPS has a fundamental role in arterial mechanics, but is rather poorly studied due to lack of direct in vivo measurement method. We have investigated LPS in the n=148 human femoropopliteal arteries in the context of subject demographics and risk factors, and structural and physiologic characteristics of the artery. Our results demonstrate that LPS reduces with age due to degradation and fragmentation of intramural elastin. LPS may serve as an energy reserve for adaptive remodeling, and reduction of LPS can be accelerated in tobacco users.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2017

Limb flexion-induced twist and associated intramural stresses in the human femoropopliteal artery

Anastasia Desyatova; William Poulson; Paul Deegan; Carol Lomneth; Andreas Seas; Kaspars Maleckis; Jason N. MacTaggart; Alexey Kamenskiy

High failure rates of femoropopliteal artery (FPA) interventions are often attributed to severe mechanical deformations that occur with limb movement. Torsion of the FPA likely plays a significant role, but is poorly characterized and the associated intramural stresses are currently unknown. FPA torsion in the walking, sitting and gardening postures was characterized in n = 28 in situ FPAs using intra-arterial markers. Principal mechanical stresses and strains were quantified in the superficial femoral artery (SFA), adductor hiatus segment (AH) and the popliteal artery (PA) using analytical modelling. The FPA experienced significant torsion during limb flexion that was most severe in the gardening posture. The associated mechanical stresses were non-uniformly distributed along the length of the artery, increasing distally and achieving maximum values in the PA. Maximum twist in the SFA ranged 10–13° cm−1, at the AH 8–16° cm−1, and in the PA 14–26° cm−1 in the walking, sitting and gardening postures. Maximum principal stresses were 30–35 kPa in the SFA, 27–37 kPa at the AH and 39–43 kPa in the PA. Understanding torsional deformations and intramural stresses in the FPA can assist with device selection for peripheral arterial disease interventions and may help guide the development of devices with improved characteristics.


Journal of The Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials | 2017

Comparison of femoropopliteal artery stents under axial and radial compression, axial tension, bending, and torsion deformations

Kaspars Maleckis; Paul Deegan; William Poulson; Cole Sievers; Anastasia Desyatova; Jason N. MacTaggart; Alexey Kamenskiy

High failure rates of Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD) stenting appear to be associated with the inability of certain stent designs to accommodate severe biomechanical environment of the femoropopliteal artery (FPA) that bends, twists, and axially compresses during limb flexion. Twelve Nitinol stents (Absolute Pro, Supera, Lifestent, Innova, Zilver, Smart Control, Smart Flex, EverFlex, Viabahn, Tigris, Misago, and Complete SE) were quasi-statically tested under bench-top axial and radial compression, axial tension, bending, and torsional deformations. Stents were compared in terms of force-strain behavior, stiffness, and geometrical shape under each deformation mode. Tigris was the least stiff stent under axial compression (6.6N/m axial stiffness) and bending (0.1N/m) deformations, while Smart Control was the stiffest (575.3N/m and 105.4N/m, respectively). Under radial compression Complete SE was the stiffest (892.8N/m), while Smart Control had the lowest radial stiffness (211.0N/m). Viabahn and Supera had the lowest and highest torsional stiffness (2.2μNm/° and 959.2μNm/°), respectively. None of the 12 PAD stents demonstrated superior characteristics under all deformation modes and many experienced global buckling and diameter pinching. Though it is yet to be determined which of these deformation modes might have greater clinical impact, results of the current analysis may help guide development of new stents with improved mechanical characteristics.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2018

Mechanically robust cryogels with injectability and bioprinting supportability for adipose tissue engineering

Dianjun Qi; Shaohua Wu; Mitchell A. Kuss; Wen Shi; Soonkyu Chung; Paul Deegan; Alexey Kamenskiy; Yini He; Bin Duan

Bioengineered adipose tissues have gained increased interest as a promising alternative to autologous tissue flaps and synthetic adipose fillers for soft tissue augmentation and defect reconstruction in clinic. Although many scaffolding materials and biofabrication methods have been investigated for adipose tissue engineering in the last decades, there are still challenges to recapitulate the appropriate adipose tissue microenvironment, maintain volume stability, and induce vascularization to achieve long-term function and integration. In the present research, we fabricated cryogels consisting of methacrylated gelatin, methacrylated hyaluronic acid, and 4arm poly(ethylene glycol) acrylate (PEG-4A) by using cryopolymerization. The cryogels were repeatedly injectable and stretchable, and the addition of PEG-4A improved the robustness and mechanical properties. The cryogels supported human adipose progenitor cell (HWA) and adipose derived mesenchymal stromal cell adhesion, proliferation, and adipogenic differentiation and maturation, regardless of the addition of PEG-4A. The HWA laden cryogels facilitated the co-culture of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and capillary-like network formation, which in return also promoted adipogenesis. We further combined cryogels with 3D bioprinting to generate handleable adipose constructs with clinically relevant size. 3D bioprinting enabled the deposition of multiple bioinks onto the cryogels. The bioprinted flap-like constructs had an integrated structure without delamination and supported vascularization. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE Adipose tissue engineering is promising for reconstruction of soft tissue defects, and also challenging for restoring and maintaining soft tissue volume and shape, and achieving vascularization and integration. In this study, we fabricated cryogels with mechanical robustness, injectability, and stretchability by using cryopolymerization. The cryogels promoted cell adhesion, proliferation, and adipogenic differentiation and maturation of human adipose progenitor cells and adipose derived mesenchymal stromal cells. Moreover, the cryogels also supported 3D bioprinting on top, forming vascularized adipose constructs. This study demonstrates the potential of the implementation of cryogels for generating volume-stable adipose tissue constructs and provides a strategy to fabricate vascularized flap-like constructs for complex soft tissue regeneration.


Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology | 2017

Constitutive description of human femoropopliteal artery aging

Alexey Kamenskiy; Andreas Seas; Paul Deegan; William Poulson; Eric Anttila; Sylvie Sim; Anastasia Desyatova; Jason N. MacTaggart


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017

Limb flexion-induced axial compression and bending in human femoropopliteal artery segments

William Poulson; Alexey Kamenskiy; Andreas Seas; Paul Deegan; Carol Lomneth; Jason N. MacTaggart


Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology | 2017

The choice of a constitutive formulation for modeling limb flexion-induced deformations and stresses in the human femoropopliteal arteries of different ages

Anastasia Desyatova; Jason N. MacTaggart; William Poulson; Paul Deegan; Carol Lomneth; Anjali Sandip; Alexey Kamenskiy


Annals of Surgery | 2018

Stent Design Affects Femoropopliteal Artery Deformation

Jason N. MacTaggart; William Poulson; Andreas Seas; Paul Deegan; Carol Lomneth; Anastasia Desyatova; Kaspars Maleckis; Alexey Kamenskiy


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017

SS31 Effects of Different Stent Designs on Limb Flexion-Induced Axial Compression, Bending, and Torsion in Human Femoropopliteal Arteries

William Poulson; Alexey Kamenskiy; Paul Deegan; Carol Lomneth; Jason N. MacTaggart; Andreas Seas


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2016

The Popliteal Artery Demonstrates Significantly Higher Torsion Than the Superficial Femoral Artery During Limb Flexion

William Poulson; Alexey Kamenskiy; Paul Deegan; Carol Lomneth; Jason N. MacTaggart

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Alexey Kamenskiy

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Jason N. MacTaggart

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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William Poulson

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Anastasia Desyatova

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Carol Lomneth

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Kaspars Maleckis

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Sylvie Sim

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Anjali Sandip

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Bin Duan

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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