PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2025

Comparative Analysis of Two Measurement Modalities for Ex Vivo Analysis of Corneal Stiffness in Porcine Corneas

Reifeltshammer SA, Seferovic H, et al.

Bioengineering

Johannes Kepler University Linz, Kepler University Clinic, University of Bern, Ludwig - Maximilians - University Munich, IROC Zurich

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study compared two widely used biomechanical testing modalities—uniaxial tensile testing and AFM nanoindentation—to characterize stiffness changes in porcine corneas following corneal crosslinking (CXL). Sixty-two eyes were assigned to control, Dresden-protocol CXL (CXL3), or accelerated CXL (CXL9) groups, then evaluated using both modalities on paired corneal samples. Uniaxial tensile testing demonstrated a clear stiffening response, with CXL3 producing the largest increase (≈1.96-fold increase in Young’s modulus at 10% strain), followed by CXL9 (≈1.48-fold). AFM nanoindentation detected similar directional trends, with localized stiffness increases of 16–28%, though group differences were not statistically significant due to spatial heterogeneity at the micrometer scale. The findings highlight how tensile testing captures global stiffening across the entire tissue strip, while nanoindentation reveals position-dependent stromal variations. Together, the modalities offer complementary insights into the biomechanical effects of different CXL protocols.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

UStretch

Corneal strips were mounted on a CellScale UStretch uniaxial tensile testing device equipped with a 1 N load cell. Samples were clamped 4 mm apart and immersed in 16% dextran to maintain hydration. Each specimen underwent a 120 s preload at 5×10³ Pa followed by controlled extension at 0.035 mm/s to 16% strain. The UStretch recorded force–displacement data at 10 ms intervals, enabling calculation of stress–strain curves and derivation of Young’s modulus at 6%, 8%, and 10% strain. These measurements provided the global stiffness comparisons between control, CXL3, and CXL9 tissues.
AUTHORS

Sophia A. Reifeltshammer, Hannah Seferovic, Malavika H. Nambiar, Philippe Büchler, Theo G. Seiler, Jascha Wendelstein, Matthias Bolz, Peter Hinterdorfer, Yoo Jin Oh, Isaak Fischinger.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Bioengineering

YEAR

2025

INSTITUTIONS

Johannes Kepler University Linz, Kepler University Clinic, University of Bern, Ludwig - Maximilians - University Munich, IROC Zurich

COUNTRIES

Austria, Germany, Switzerland

INSTRUMENT USED

UStretch

TESTING METHODS

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Ophthalmic Biomechanics & Corneal Tissue Engineering

Related Publications:

Instrument Used:
Year:
Testing Method:
Research Application:
Country:

Viscoelastic Modelling of Right Ventricular and Septum Myocardia of Porcine Heart

Semakane L, Nemavhola F, et al.

Engineering Materials, Structures, Systems and Methods for a More Sustainable Future (Book Chapter)

UStretch

Tensile TestingViscoelastic & Time-Dependent Testing

Cardiac Tissue Engineering & MechanicsMechanotransduction

2025

Mechanical Age-Related Differences in the Human Cadaveric Annulus Fibrosus

Sinopoli SI, Whittal MC, et al.

Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials

BioTesterUStretch

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingMicro-Mechanical TestingPeel TestingTensile Testing

Fibrosis & Tissue RemodelingIntervertebral Disc BiomechanicsMechanotransductionMusculoskeletal Tissue Engineering & Mechanics

2025

Polyvinyl Alcohol/Nafion®–Zirconia Phosphate Nanocomposite Membranes for Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cell Applications: Synthesis and Characterisation

Sigwadi R, Nemavhola F

Membranes

UStretch

Tensile Testing

Membranes and Thin Films MechanicsPolymers and Elastomers Testing

2023

Contact Sales

Product of Interest: