Polarizing light microscopy of intestine and its relationship to mechanical behaviour
- PMID: 7328641
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2818.1981.tb02494.x
Polarizing light microscopy of intestine and its relationship to mechanical behaviour
Abstract
The polarizing optical microscope has been used to observe morphologically the effect of stress on rat and bovine intestine. Collagen fibres about 6 micrometers in diameter were found to be biaxially oriented at approximately +30 degrees and -30 degrees to the longitudinal direction. The fibres are arranged in layers with the fibres in each layer densely packed in parallel undulating arrays. The undulations give rise to the extinction pattern observed in the polarizing optical microscope. The initial response to stress is straightening of the fibres. Gradual straightening of the fibres is related to the increasing stiffness of the tissue observed in the stress--strain relationship. Once the fibres ares straightened, the biaxial orientation of the fibres produces higher strength in the longitudinal direction than in the transverse direction. This organization of intestinal collagen fibres has not been reported previously and is not observed in other biaxial tissues such as skin and aorta. Thus, intestine is a unique tissue for studying the relationship of mechanical behaviour to structure and organization of collagen.
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