Literature DB >> 28844036

From state-of-the-art cell therapy to endogenous cardiac repair.

Werner Mohl1, Timothy D Henry, Dejan Milasinovic, Filomain Nguemo, Juergen Hescheler, Emerson C Perin.   

Abstract

Clinical heart failure prevention and contemporary therapy often involve breaking the vicious cycle of global haemodynamic consequences of myocardial decay. The lack of effective regenerative therapies results in a primary focus on preventing further deterioration of cardiac performance. The cellular transplantation hypothesis has been evaluated in many different preclinical models and a handful of important clinical trials. The primary expectation that cellular transplants will be embedded into failing myocardium and fuse with existing functioning cells appears unlikely. A multitude of cellular formulas, access routes and clinical surrogate endpoints for evaluation add to the complexity of cellular therapies. Several recent large clinical trials have provided insights into both the regenerative potential and clinical improvement from non-regenerative mechanisms. Initiating endogenous repair seems to be another meaningful alternative to recover structural integrity in myocardial injury. This option may be achieved using a transcoronary sinus catheter intervention, implying the understanding of basic principles in biology. With intermittent reduction of outflow in cardiac veins (PICSO), vascular cells appear to be activated and restart a programme similar to pathways in the developing heart. Structural regeneration may be possible without requiring exogenous agents, or a combination of both approaches may become clinical reality in the next decade.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28844036     DOI: 10.4244/EIJ-D-17-00467

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  EuroIntervention        ISSN: 1774-024X            Impact factor:   6.534


  2 in total

Review 1.  Function Follows Form - A Review of Cardiac Cell Therapy.

Authors:  Kenta Nakamura; Charles E Murry
Journal:  Circ J       Date:  2019-11-13       Impact factor: 2.993

2.  Acute molecular effects of pressure-controlled intermittent coronary sinus occlusion in patients with advanced heart failure.

Authors:  Werner Mohl; Ernest Spitzer; Robert M Mader; Vilas Wagh; Filomain Nguemo; Dejan Milasinovic; Alem Jusić; Cesar Khazen; Edit Szodorai; Beatrice Birkenberg; Gert Lubec; Juergen Hescheler; Patrick W Serruys
Journal:  ESC Heart Fail       Date:  2018-09-19
  2 in total

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