Cardiac Biomechanics Group at Columbia University  
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Publications

Structure and mechanics of healing myocardial infarcts. Ann Rev Biomed Eng

Parameterization of left ventricular wall motion... Ann Biomed Eng

Determinants of left ventricular shape change... J Biomech Eng

Creating alignment and anisotropy in engineered heart tissue... Tissue Eng

Stress fibers buckle in rapidly shortened cells... Cell Motil Cytoskel

Isotonic biaxial loading of fibroblast-populated... Biomech Model Mechanobiol

Normalized diastolic properties after left ventricular assist... Circulation

Modeling cardiac mechanical properties in three dimensions. Phil Trans Royal Soc Lond A

 

 

 

Creating alignment and anisotropy in engineered heart tissue: role of boundary conditions in a model three-dimensional culture system.

Tissue Engineering. 2003 Aug;9(4):567-577.
Costa KD, Lee EJ, Holmes JW.

Electrical and mechanical anisotropy arise from matrix and cellular alignment in native myocardium. Generation of anisotropy in engineered heart tissue will be required to match native properties and will provide immediate opportunities to investigate the genesis and structural determinants of functional anisotropy. We investigated the influence of geometry and boundary conditions on fibroblast alignment in thin collagen gels. Consistent with previous reports, we found that human dermal fibroblasts align parallel to free edges in partially constrained gels; in contrast to at least one report, fibroblasts in fully constrained gels remained randomly aligned independent of geometry. These experiments allowed us to distinguish between two possible mechanisms for such alignment. Mean orientations that followed the shape of the free edges and stronger alignment nearest the free edges in gels with a variety of geometries suggested that cells align parallel to a local free boundary rather than to local lines of tension. These findings focus attention on the presence of voids and free surfaces such as the endocardium and epicardium, cleavage planes, and blood vessels in governing cell and fiber alignment in developing and remodeling myocardium, myocardial scar tissue, and engineered heart constructs.

 

 

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