Soft tissue connects and surrounds or supports internal organs and bones, and includes muscle, , , Adipose tissue, fibrous tissue, Lymphatic vessel and , , and synovial membranes. Soft tissue is tissue in the body that is not hard tissue by the processes of ossification or calcification such as and teeth.
It is sometimes defined by what it is not – such as "nonepithelial, extraskeletal mesenchyme exclusive of the reticuloendothelial system and glia".
Human soft tissue is highly deformable, and its mechanical properties vary significantly from one person to another. Impact testing results showed that the stiffness and the damping resistance of a test subject's tissue are correlated with the mass, velocity, and size of the striking object. Such properties may be useful for forensics investigation when contusions were induced. When a solid object impacts a human soft tissue, the energy of the impact will be absorbed by the tissues to reduce the effect of the impact or the pain level; subjects with more soft tissue thickness tended to absorb the impacts with less aversion.
Soft tissues have the potential to undergo large deformations and still return to the initial configuration when unloaded, i.e. they are hyperelastic materials, and their stress-strain curve is nonlinear. The soft tissues are also viscoelastic, incompressible and usually anisotropic. Some viscoelastic properties observable in soft tissues are: relaxation, creep and hysteresis.
Despite the independence of strain rate, preconditioned soft tissues still present hysteresis, so the mechanical response can be modeled as hyperelastic with different material constants at loading and unloading. By this method the elasticity theory is used to model an inelastic material. Fung has called this model as pseudoelastic to point out that the material is not truly elastic.
On the other hand, the linear term is negligible when the analysis rely only on big strains.
where is the shear modulus for infinitesimal strains and is a stiffening parameter, associated with limiting chain extensibility. This constitutive model cannot be stretched in uni-axial tension beyond a maximal stretch , which is the positive root of
Growth and remodeling have a major role in the cause of some common soft tissue diseases, like arterial stenosis and aneurisms and any soft tissue fibrosis. Other instance of tissue remodeling is the thickening of the cardiac muscle in response to the growth of blood pressure detected by the artery wall.
The collagen fibers are approximately 1-2 μm thick. Thus, the resolution of the imaging technique needs to be approximately 0.5 μm. Some techniques allow the direct acquisition of volume data while other need the slicing of the specimen. In both cases, the volume that is extracted must be able to follow the fiber bundles across the volume. High contrast makes segmentation easier, especially when color information is available. In addition, the need for fixation must also be addressed. It has been shown that soft tissue fixation in formalin causes shrinkage, altering the structure of the original tissue. Some typical values of contraction for different fixation are: formalin (5% - 10%), ethanol (10%), bouin solution (<5%).
Imaging methods used in ECM visualization and their properties.
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Transmission Light
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Confocal
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Multi-Photon Excitation Fluorescence
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Second Harmonic Generation
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Optical coherence tomography
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Resolution
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0.25 μm
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Axial: 0.25–0.5 μm
Lateral: 1 μm
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Axial: 0.5 μm
Lateral: 1 μm
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Axial: 0.5 μm
Lateral: 1 μm
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Axial: 3–15 μm
Lateral: 1–15 μm
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Contrast
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Very High
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Low
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High
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High
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Moderate
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Penetration
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N/A
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10 μm–300 μm
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100-1000 μm
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100–1000 μm
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Up to 2–3 mm
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Image stack cost
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High
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Low
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Low
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Low
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Low
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Fixation
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Required
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Required
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Not required
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Not required
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Not required
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Embedding
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Required
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Required
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Not required
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Not required
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Not required
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Staining
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Required
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Not required
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Not required
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Not required
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Not required
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Cost
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Low
Moderate to high |
High
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High
| Moderate |
Musculoskeletal specialists, manual therapists, neuromuscular physiologists and neurologists specialize in treating injuries and ailments in the soft tissue areas of the body. These specialized clinicians often develop innovative ways to manipulate the soft tissue to speed natural healing and relieve the mysterious pain that often accompanies soft tissue injuries. This area of expertise has become known as soft tissue therapy and is rapidly expanding as technology continues to improve the ability of these specialists to identify problem areas.
A promising new method of treating wounds and soft tissue injuries is via platelet-derived growth factor.
There is a close overlap between the term "soft tissue disorder" and rheumatism. Sometimes the term "soft tissue rheumatic disorders" is used to describe these conditions.
Soft tissue sarcomas are many types of cancer that can develop in the soft tissues.
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