The wall of saccular brain aneurysms, lesions that develop at the fork regions of human brain arteries, is a layered multidirectional fabric of fibrous collagen. The wall tissue has the mechanical features of high elastic stiffness and a low tensile strength compared to adjacent arteries. Arterial blood pressure within the sac of an aneurysm stresses the wall in all tangential directions; thus an area of mechanical weakness may be characterized by an area lacking fibre strength, or an area with inadequately aligned fibres.
The collagen fibres of the wall are birefringent, with many fibre types, similar to wound healing skin (types I, III, IV, V, VI) The known correlation between fibre birefringence and tissue strength for dermal wound healing3 provided the opportunity in this research to calculate strength maps to compare one lesion from another, and to make regional comparisons around a single lesion.