Publications by authors named "Elizabeth Cordoves"

Article Synopsis
  • - Heart valve disease often requires patients to have several surgeries due to the wear and tear of artificial valves, indicating a need for better replacement options that can grow and repair themselves.
  • - Allogeneic valve transplantation offers a potential solution by providing living valve replacements that could address these issues more effectively.
  • - The authors suggest a new framework aimed at preserving and rehabilitating these living valves outside the body (ex vivo), to enhance their viability and functionality.
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The options for testing new cardiac procedures and investigative medical devices prior to use in an animal model are limited. In this study, we present a method for mounting a porcine aortic valve in a pulse duplicator to evaluate its hydrodynamic properties. These properties can then be evaluated before and after the procedure under investigation is performed and/or the investigative medical device is applied.

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Valvular heart disease is a globally prevalent cause of morbidity and mortality, with both congenital and acquired clinical presentations. Tissue engineered heart valves (TEHVs) have the potential to radically shift the treatment landscape for valvular disease by functioning as life-long valve replacements that overcome the current limitations of bioprosthetic and mechanical valves. TEHVs are envisioned to meet these goals by functioning as bioinstructive scaffolds that guide the in situ generation of autologous valves capable of growth, repair, and remodeling within the patient.

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Helical alignments within the heart's musculature have been speculated to be important in achieving physiological pumping efficiencies. Testing this possibility is difficult, however, because it is challenging to reproduce the fine spatial features and complex structures of the heart's musculature using current techniques. Here we report focused rotary jet spinning (FRJS), an additive manufacturing approach that enables rapid fabrication of micro/nanofiber scaffolds with programmable alignments in three-dimensional geometries.

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