Estimating Human Trabecular Meshwork Stiffness by Numerical Modeling and Advanced OCT Imaging

The purpose of this study was to estimate human trabecular meshwork (hTM) stiffness, thought to be elevated in glaucoma, using a novel indirect approach, and to compare results with direct en face atomic force microscopy (AFM) measurements. Postmortem human eyes were perfused to measure outflow faci...

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Published inInvestigative ophthalmology & visual science Vol. 58; no. 11; pp. 4809 - 4817
Main Authors Wang, Ke, Johnstone, Murray A., Xin, Chen, Song, Shaozhen, Padilla, Steven, Vranka, Janice A., Acott, Ted S., Zhou, Kai, Schwaner, Stephen A., Wang, Ruikang K., Sulchek, Todd, Ethier, C. Ross
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology 01.09.2017
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Summary:The purpose of this study was to estimate human trabecular meshwork (hTM) stiffness, thought to be elevated in glaucoma, using a novel indirect approach, and to compare results with direct en face atomic force microscopy (AFM) measurements. Postmortem human eyes were perfused to measure outflow facility and identify high- and low-flow regions (HF, LF) by tracer. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) images were obtained as Schlemm's canal luminal pressure was directly manipulated. TM stiffness was deduced by an inverse finite element modeling (FEM) approach. A series of AFM forcemaps was acquired along a line traversing the anterior angle on a radially cut flat-mount corneoscleral wedge with TM facing upward. The elastic modulus of normal hTM estimated by inverse FEM was 70 ± 20 kPa (mean ± SD), whereas glaucomatous hTM was slightly stiffer (98 ± 19 kPa). This trend was consistent with TM stiffnesses measured by AFM: normal hTM stiffness = 1.37 ± 0.56 kPa, which was lower than glaucomatous hTM stiffness (2.75 ± 1.19 kPa). None of these differences were statistically significant. TM in HF wedges was softer than that in LF wedges for both normal and glaucomatous eyes based on the inverse FEM approach but not by AFM. Outflow facility was significantly correlated with TM stiffness estimated by FEM in six human eyes (P = 0.018). TM stiffness is higher, but only modestly so, in glaucomatous patients. Outflow facility in both normal and glaucomatous human eyes appears to associate with TM stiffness. This evidence motivates further studies to investigate factors underlying TM biomechanical property regulation.
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ISSN:1552-5783
0146-0404
1552-5783
DOI:10.1167/iovs.17-22175