Publications by authors named "M C Allenby"

Article Synopsis
  • Intracranial aneurysms (IAs) affect 2-6% of people globally and pose a high risk of mortality (30-50%) if they rupture.
  • A new open-access dataset of time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography (TOF-MRA) images has been created, containing scans from 63 patients, with 24 of them having undergone follow-up imaging.
  • The dataset, evaluated by a neuroradiologist, includes aneurysm and vessel segmentations, clinical annotations, and 3D models, aiming to enhance research on IA growth, support surgical training, and improve rupture prediction technologies.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how SARS-CoV-2 infection during pregnancy affects the placenta, particularly leading to a 'preeclampsia-like syndrome'.
  • Researchers analyzed gene expression in placental tissues from infected pregnant individuals compared to samples from before the pandemic, revealing significant changes.
  • Findings indicate that SARS-CoV-2 infection promotes pathways linked to hypoxia, vascular issues, and inflammation, contributing to placental dysfunction.
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The increasing gap between clinical demand for tissue or organ transplants and the availability of donated tissue highlights the emerging opportunities for lab-grown or synthetically engineered tissue. While the field of tissue engineering has existed for nearly half a century, its clinical translation remains unrealised, in part, due to a limited ability to engineer sufficient vascular supply into fabricated tissue, which is necessary to enable nutrient and waste exchange, prevent cellular necrosis, and support tissue proliferation. Techniques to develop anatomically relevant, functional vascular networks in vitro have made significant progress in the last decade, however, the challenge now remains as to how best incorporate these throughout dense parenchymal tissue-like structures to address diffusion-limited development and allow for the fabrication of large-scale vascularised tissue.

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Vascular compliance is considered both a cause and a consequence of cardiovascular disease and a significant factor in the mid- and long-term patency of vascular grafts. However, the biomechanical effects of localised changes in compliance cannot be satisfactorily studied with the available medical imaging technologies or surgical simulation materials. To address this unmet need, we developed a coupled silico-vitro platform which allows for the validation of numerical fluid-structure interaction results as a numerical model and physical prototype.

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