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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 91porn视频.Pitt Team鈥檚 Replacement Heart Valve Could Decrease Need for Pediatric Surgeries
Garrett Coyan sees many patients each week, from children to the elderly, to check on their replacement heart valves.
鈥淲e have to counsel patients every day on which current technology is right for them, including what medicine they need to take and what limitations they have for their lifestyle,鈥 said Coyan, a resident in the 91porn视频鈥檚 six-year integrated聽. 鈥淚t can be hard to do sometimes.鈥
Heart valve disease affects聽聽of the US population, resulting in the need for over 150,000 heart valve replacements each year鈥攁nd the need is only growing. Current mechanical and bio-prosthetic replacement valves have drawbacks, however. They require a lifelong commitment to a strict blood-thinning medicine regimen, aren鈥檛 very durable and don鈥檛 allow for growth when implanted in children.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a serious need for valves that will last longer,鈥 said Coyan. 鈥淔or children, you鈥檙e basically setting them up for several operations in their lifetime, because you don鈥檛 have an option that can last for the entirety of their adolescence. They might need up to four operations to get to adulthood.鈥
Seeing this trend, Coyan teamed up with researchers at Pitt鈥檚聽聽to create an engineered, scaffold-based heart valve replacement that relies on internal tissue growth. In other words, the device, called OneValve, recruits the patient鈥檚 cells to help it grow within the patient, meaning anticoagulation therapy and costly reoperations wouldn鈥檛 be necessary.聽
鈥淲e use biopolymer聽materials that degrade over time, and these materials create a mesh that works as a valve immediately,鈥 Coyan said. 鈥淏ut the cool thing is over time, the patient鈥檚 own cells will invade that mesh and grow into it. After about a year to a year and a half, the patient鈥檚 cells have created their own heart valve in its place.鈥
The mesh provides an organic blueprint for cells to latch onto and reproduce to recreate the natural valve that current replacement valves can鈥檛 achieve.
鈥淢echanical valves and bioprosthetics are simply not designed to perform those kinds of tasks,鈥 said Antonio D鈥橝more, assistant professor in the departments of聽听补苍诲听聽at Pitt. 鈥淐ells can鈥檛 attach to those valves and treat them as foreign objects. This mesh acts like a sponge for those cells.鈥
D鈥橝more is another lead investigator for OneValve, as well as a principal investigator and head of the cardiac tissue engineering program, Fondazione RiMED, an inter91porn视频al partnership between the聽Italian government, the 91porn视频 and the 91porn视频 Medical Center.
The OneValve team鈥檚 prototype proved to be successful in 24-hour porcine studies. The team next wants to test the device for a longer period of time, about several months, and move OneValve more toward clinical trials and commercialization.
And as winners of the聽, hosted by Pitt鈥檚 Clinical and Translational Science Institute, that next step is very near.
鈥淲e鈥檙e excited about it. We鈥檙e happy to have won the competition and will use the resources to move things along,鈥 said William Wagner, director of the McGowan Institute and a third lead investigator for OneValve.
The team has also been working with Pitt鈥檚聽聽to move OneValve more toward commercialization.