Coronary-Based Right Heart Flap Recellularization by Rat Neonatal Whole Cardiac Cells: a Viable Sheep Cardiac Patch Model for Possible Management of Heart Aneurysm

Author(s):  
Aram Akbarzadeh ◽  
Seyed Hossein Ahmadi Tafti ◽  
Shabnam Sabetkish ◽  
Zahra Hassannejad ◽  
Abdol-Mohammad Kajbafzadeh
Nanomaterials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 689
Author(s):  
Smadar Arvatz ◽  
Lior Wertheim ◽  
Sharon Fleischer ◽  
Assaf Shapira ◽  
Tal Dvir

Hydrogels are widely used materials for cardiac tissue engineering. However, once the cells are encapsulated within hydrogels, mass transfer to the core of the engineered tissue is limited, and cell viability is compromised. Here, we report on the development of a channeled ECM-based nanofibrous hydrogel for engineering vascularized cardiac tissues. An omentum hydrogel was mixed with cardiac cells, patterned to create channels and closed, and then seeded with endothelial cells to form open cellular lumens. A mathematical model was used to evaluate the necessity of the channels for maintaining cell viability and the true potential of the vascularized hydrogel to form a viable cardiac patch was studied.


Author(s):  
Tiago Paggi de Almeida ◽  
Mark Nothstein ◽  
Xin Li ◽  
Michela Masè ◽  
Flavia Ravelli ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 172
Author(s):  
Olga Brazhkina ◽  
Jeong Hun Park ◽  
Hyun-Ji Park ◽  
Sruti Bheri ◽  
Joshua T. Maxwell ◽  
...  

Myocardial infarction is one of the largest contributors to cardiovascular disease and reduces the ability of the heart to pump blood. One promising therapeutic approach to address the diminished function is the use of cardiac patches composed of biomaterial substrates and cardiac cells. These patches can be enhanced with the application of an auxetic design, which has a negative Poisson’s ratio and can be modified to suit the mechanics of the infarct and surrounding cardiac tissue. Here, we examined multiple auxetic models (orthogonal missing rib and re-entrant honeycomb in two orientations) with tunable mechanical properties as a cardiac patch substrate. Further, we demonstrated that 3D printing based auxetic cardiac patches of varying thicknesses (0.2, 0.4, and 0.6 mm) composed of polycaprolactone and gelatin methacrylate can support induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte function for 14-day culture. Taken together, this work shows the potential of cellularized auxetic cardiac patches as a suitable tissue engineering approach to treating cardiovascular disease.


Author(s):  
W.G. Wier

A fundamentally new understanding of cardiac excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling is being developed from recent experimental work using confocal microscopy of single isolated heart cells. In particular, the transient change in intracellular free calcium ion concentration ([Ca2+]i transient) that activates muscle contraction is now viewed as resulting from the spatial and temporal summation of small (∼ 8 μm3), subcellular, stereotyped ‘local [Ca2+]i-transients' or, as they have been called, ‘calcium sparks'. This new understanding may be called ‘local control of E-C coupling'. The relevance to normal heart cell function of ‘local control, theory and the recent confocal data on spontaneous Ca2+ ‘sparks', and on electrically evoked local [Ca2+]i-transients has been unknown however, because the previous studies were all conducted on slack, internally perfused, single, enzymatically dissociated cardiac cells, at room temperature, usually with Cs+ replacing K+, and often in the presence of Ca2-channel blockers. The present work was undertaken to establish whether or not the concepts derived from these studies are in fact relevant to normal cardiac tissue under physiological conditions, by attempting to record local [Ca2+]i-transients, sparks (and Ca2+ waves) in intact, multi-cellular cardiac tissue.


2007 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-33
Author(s):  
L BOKERIA ◽  
A GUDKOVA ◽  
E SEMERNIN ◽  
A KRUTIKOV ◽  
E LOKHMATOVA ◽  
...  

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