Glass microneedles for force measurements: a finite-element analysis model.

Peter N Ayittey, John S Walker, Jeremy J Rice, Pieter P de Tombe
Author Information
  1. Peter N Ayittey: Department of Physiology and Biophysics MC901, Center for Cardiovascular Research, University of Illinois at Chicago, 835 S. Wolcott Ave., Chicago, IL 60612, USA.

Abstract

Changes in developed force (0.1-3.0 microN) observed during contraction of single myofibrils in response to rapidly changing calcium concentrations can be measured using glass microneedles. These microneedles are calibrated for stiffness and deflect on response to developed myofibril force. The precision and accuracy of kinetic measurements are highly dependent on the structural and mechanical characteristics of the microneedles, which are generally assumed to have a linear force-deflection relationship. We present a finite-element analysis (FEA) model used to simulate the effects of measurable geometry on stiffness as a function of applied force and validate our model with actual measured needle properties. In addition, we developed a simple heuristic constitutive equation that best describes the stiffness of our range of microneedles used and define limits of geometry parameters within which our predictions hold true. Our model also maps a relation between the geometry parameters and natural frequencies in air, enabling optimum parametric combinations for microneedle fabrication that would reflect more reliable force measurement in fluids and physiological environments. We propose a use for this model to aid in the design of microneedles to improve calibration time, reproducibility, and precision for measuring myofibrillar, cellular, and supramolecular kinetic forces.

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Grants

  1. P01 HL062426/NHLBI NIH HHS
  2. HL62426/NHLBI NIH HHS
  3. HL75494/NHLBI NIH HHS
  4. HL73828/NHLBI NIH HHS
  5. R01 HL075494/NHLBI NIH HHS
  6. R01 HL073828/NHLBI NIH HHS
  7. R01 HL075494-06/NHLBI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Animals
Calcium
Calibration
Computer Simulation
Equipment Design
Finite Element Analysis
Glass
Miniaturization
Muscle Contraction
Myofibrils
Needles

Chemicals

Calcium

Word Cloud

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