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A mechanistic insight into the mechanical role of the stratum corneum during stretching and compression of the skin

A mechanistic insight into the mechanical role of the stratum corneum during stretching and compression of the skin
A mechanistic insight into the mechanical role of the stratum corneum during stretching and compression of the skin
The study of skin biophysics has largely been driven by consumer goods, biomedical and cosmetic industries which aim to design products that efficiently interact with the skin and/or modify its biophysical properties for health or cosmetic benefits. The skin is a hierarchical biological structure featuring several layers with their own distinct geometry and mechanical properties. Up to now, no computational models of the skin have simultaneously accounted for these geometrical and material characteristics to study their complex biomechanical interactions under particular macroscopic deformation modes.

The goal of this study was, therefore, to develop a robust methodology combining histological sections of human skin, image-processing and finite element techniques to address fundamental questions about skin mechanics and, more particularly, about how macroscopic strains are transmitted and modulated through the epidermis and dermis. The work hypothesis was that, as skin deforms under macroscopic loads, the stratum corneum does not experience significant strains but rather folds/unfolds during skin extension/compression.

A sample of fresh human mid-back skin was processed for wax histology. Sections were stained and photographed by optical microscopy. The multiple images were stitched together to produce a larger region of interest and segmented to extract the geometry of the stratum corneum, viable epidermis and dermis. From the segmented structures a 2D finite element mesh of the skin composite model was created and geometrically non-linear plane-strain finite element analyses were conducted to study the sensitivity of the model to variations in mechanical properties.

The hybrid experimental-computational methodology has offered valuable insights into the simulated mechanics of the skin, and that of the stratum corneum in particular, by providing qualitative and quantitative information on strain magnitude and distribution.

Through a complex non-linear interplay, the geometry and mechanical characteristics of the skin layers (and their relative balance), play a critical role in conditioning the skin mechanical response to macroscopic in-plane compression and extension. Topographical features of the skin surface such as furrows were shown to act as an efficient means to deflect, convert and redistribute strain—and so stress—within the stratum corneum, viable epidermis and dermis. Strain reduction and amplification phenomena were also observed and quantified.

Despite the small thickness of the stratum corneum, its Young?s modulus has a significant effect not only on the strain magnitude and directions within the stratum corneum layer but also on those of the underlying layers. This effect is reflected in the deformed shape of the skin surface in simulated compression and extension and is intrinsically linked to the rather complex geometrical characteristics of each skin layer. Moreover, if the Young?s modulus of the viable epidermis is assumed to be reduced by a factor 12, the area of skin folding is likely to increase under skin compression. These results should be considered in the light of published computational models of the skin which, up to now, have ignored these characteristics.
skin, stratum corneum, epidermis, dermis, finite element, strain
1751-6161
197-219
Leyva-Mendivil, Maria F.
a1b88cb4-c5d9-4c6e-b6c9-7f4c4aa1c2ec
Page, Anton
e315d159-536f-4d3d-83eb-5684ee42ada0
Bressloff, Neil W.
4f531e64-dbb3-41e3-a5d3-e6a5a7a77c92
Leyva-Mendivil, Maria F.
a1b88cb4-c5d9-4c6e-b6c9-7f4c4aa1c2ec
Page, Anton
e315d159-536f-4d3d-83eb-5684ee42ada0
Bressloff, Neil W.
4f531e64-dbb3-41e3-a5d3-e6a5a7a77c92

Leyva-Mendivil, Maria F., Page, Anton and Bressloff, Neil W. (2015) A mechanistic insight into the mechanical role of the stratum corneum during stretching and compression of the skin. Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials, 49, 197-219. (doi:10.1016/j.jmbbm.2015.05.010).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The study of skin biophysics has largely been driven by consumer goods, biomedical and cosmetic industries which aim to design products that efficiently interact with the skin and/or modify its biophysical properties for health or cosmetic benefits. The skin is a hierarchical biological structure featuring several layers with their own distinct geometry and mechanical properties. Up to now, no computational models of the skin have simultaneously accounted for these geometrical and material characteristics to study their complex biomechanical interactions under particular macroscopic deformation modes.

The goal of this study was, therefore, to develop a robust methodology combining histological sections of human skin, image-processing and finite element techniques to address fundamental questions about skin mechanics and, more particularly, about how macroscopic strains are transmitted and modulated through the epidermis and dermis. The work hypothesis was that, as skin deforms under macroscopic loads, the stratum corneum does not experience significant strains but rather folds/unfolds during skin extension/compression.

A sample of fresh human mid-back skin was processed for wax histology. Sections were stained and photographed by optical microscopy. The multiple images were stitched together to produce a larger region of interest and segmented to extract the geometry of the stratum corneum, viable epidermis and dermis. From the segmented structures a 2D finite element mesh of the skin composite model was created and geometrically non-linear plane-strain finite element analyses were conducted to study the sensitivity of the model to variations in mechanical properties.

The hybrid experimental-computational methodology has offered valuable insights into the simulated mechanics of the skin, and that of the stratum corneum in particular, by providing qualitative and quantitative information on strain magnitude and distribution.

Through a complex non-linear interplay, the geometry and mechanical characteristics of the skin layers (and their relative balance), play a critical role in conditioning the skin mechanical response to macroscopic in-plane compression and extension. Topographical features of the skin surface such as furrows were shown to act as an efficient means to deflect, convert and redistribute strain—and so stress—within the stratum corneum, viable epidermis and dermis. Strain reduction and amplification phenomena were also observed and quantified.

Despite the small thickness of the stratum corneum, its Young?s modulus has a significant effect not only on the strain magnitude and directions within the stratum corneum layer but also on those of the underlying layers. This effect is reflected in the deformed shape of the skin surface in simulated compression and extension and is intrinsically linked to the rather complex geometrical characteristics of each skin layer. Moreover, if the Young?s modulus of the viable epidermis is assumed to be reduced by a factor 12, the area of skin folding is likely to increase under skin compression. These results should be considered in the light of published computational models of the skin which, up to now, have ignored these characteristics.

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Preprint_Leyva_et_al_(2015)_JMBBM.pdf - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 May 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 May 2015
Published date: September 2015
Keywords: skin, stratum corneum, epidermis, dermis, finite element, strain
Organisations: Engineering Mats & Surface Engineerg Gp, Bioengineering Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 377325
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/377325
ISSN: 1751-6161
PURE UUID: 944bfd5d-9c41-4b6a-bc18-f9e07bda5a10

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Date deposited: 03 Jun 2015 14:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:01

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Author: Anton Page

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