| Literature DB >> 32363184 |
Vishnu Vasanthan1, Ali Fatehi Hassanabad1, Simranjit Pattar1, Paul Niklewski2,3,4, Karl Wagner5,6, Paul W M Fedak1.
Abstract
Ischemic heart disease is a common cause of end-stage heart failure and has persisted as one of the main causes of end stage heart failure requiring transplantation. Maladaptive myocardial remodeling due to ischemic injury involves multiple cell types and physiologic mechanisms. Pathogenic post-infarct remodeling involves collagen deposition, chamber dilatation and ventricular dysfunction. There have been significant improvements in medication and revascularization strategies. However, despite medical optimization and opportunities to restore blood flow, physicians lack therapies that directly access and manipulate the heart to promote healthy post-infarct myocardial remodeling. Strategies are now arising that use bioactive materials to promote cardiac regeneration by promoting angiogenesis and inhibiting cardiac fibrosis; and many of these strategies leverage the unique advantage of cardiac surgery to directly visualize and manipulate the heart. Although cellular-based strategies are emerging, multiple barriers exist for clinical translation. Acellular materials have also demonstrated preclinical therapeutic potential to promote angiogenesis and attenuate fibrosis and may be able to surmount these translational barriers. Within this review we outline various acellular biomaterials and we define epicardial infarct repair and intramyocardial injection, which focus on administering bioactive materials to the cardiac epicardium and myocardium respectively to promote cardiac regeneration. In conjunction with optimized medical therapy and revascularization, these techniques show promise to upregulate pathways of cardiac regeneration to preserve heart function.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; biomaterials; cardiac regeneration; cardiac surgery; fibrosis; heart failure; ischemic heart disease
Year: 2020 PMID: 32363184 PMCID: PMC7180212 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2020.00291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
FIGURE 1Epicardial infarct repair. After myocardial infarction a bioinductive patch is sewn using simple interrupted sutures over the infarcted area. The patch modulates epicardial and myocardial cells to promote angiogenesis and antifibrosis through direct contact or elution of growth factors. This technique can be used in concomitance with revascularization.
FIGURE 2Intramyocardial injection. After myocardial infarction a hydrogel derived from multiple possible sources is injected into the superficial myocardial using multiple injections. The hydrogel can distribute beyond the infarct zone and into the border zone. The hydrogel can act as a bulking agent to restore myocardial structure or can deliver growth factors to targeted areas. This technique can be used in concomitance with revascularization.
Preclinical evaluation modalities for biomaterials.
| Scanning Electron Microscopy | Assessment of pore size distribution and subjective evaluation of biomaterials | Subjective evaluation of patch surfaces porosity of hydrogels |
| Scanning Calorimeter | Determine endothermic peaks which correlate with denaturation temperatures of hydrogels | Denaturation temperature |
| Hydrogel water content | Determining wet and dry weight of hydrogel to calculate percent water content | Wet and dry weights to calculate water content |
| Radiolabeled hydrogel tracking | Using fluorescent tag, trace the distribution of the hydrogel after injection and assess how long it stays present post-injection | Extent of distribution of hydrogels across the epicardium and duration of time taken for degradation |
| Young’s Modulus for Biomaterial | Tensile strength of patch assessed using Young’s Modulus for strain | Maximum strain tolerated by biomaterial |
| Elution studies | Biomaterials submerged in prespecified volume of medium, typically serum-free cell culture media. After specified time, growth factors of conditioned media measured with multiplex assay | Concentrations of growth factors, which can be compared to a serum free control |
| Growth Factor Quantification after Seeding Fibroblasts | Cardiac fibroblasts seeded onto biomaterials in serum-free culture media. Conditioned media collected after specified time, growth factors quantified via multiplex assay | Concentrations of growth factors, which can be compared to serum free control without biomaterials |
| HUVEC Angiogenesis Assay | HUVEC cells are added to a protein-based gel matrix. Groups are exposed to various biomaterials which can be floated in cell culture media. After a pre-specified timepoint, light microscopy can visualize cell networks and networks can be analyzed with imaging software | Length of tubules, number of nodes and junctions in the network |
| Echocardiography | For large and small animal models. Assessment of cardiac structure and function in response to different therapies. Important measurements include EF, fractional contraction, LVESD, LVEDD, Wall thickness | Ejection fraction, fractional area contraction, systolic and diastolic ventricular size, abnormalities in wall motion |
| Magnetic Resonance Imaging | For large animal models. Assessment of cardiac structure, function, perfusion and scar formation. Important measurements include EF, fractional contraction, LVESD, LVEDD, Wall thickness, perfusion assessments and late gadolinium enhancement | Chamber size and function, scar volume, myocardial perfusion |
| Histology and Immunohistochemistry | For Large or Small Animal Models. Multiple staining techniques. Can visualize scar deposition, viable cardiomyocytes, blood vessel density, ventricular wall thickness | Quantification of blood vessels in view, proportion of scar, myocyte viability |
| Young Modulus for Myocardium | Changes in tensile strength of ventricular myocardium after induced infarction and subsequent treatment with various therapies | Maximum strain tolerated by animal ventricular myocardium |