The Oscillatory Shear Index: Quantifications for Valve Tissue Engineering and a Novel Interpretation for Calcification Thesis

(2018). The Oscillatory Shear Index: Quantifications for Valve Tissue Engineering and a Novel Interpretation for Calcification . 10.25148/etd.FIDC006850

thesis or dissertation chair

authors

  • Williams, Alex

abstract

  • Heart valve tissue engineering (HVTE) stands as a potential intervention that could reduce the prevalence of congenital heart valve disease in juvenile patients. Prior studies in our laboratory have utilized mechanobiological testing to quantify the forces involved in the development of heart valve tissue, utilizing a Flow-Stretch-Flexure (FSF) bioreactor to condition bone marrow stem cells (BMSCs)-derived valve tissue. Simulations have demonstrated that certain sets of flow conditions can introduce specific levels of oscillatory shear stress (OSS)-induced stimuli, augmenting the growth of engineered valves as well as influencing collagen formation, extracellular matrix (ECM) composition and gene expression. The computational findings discussed in this thesis outline the methods in which flow conditions, when physiologically relevant, induce specific oscillatory shear stresses which could not only lead to an optimized valve tissue phenotype (at 0.18≤ OSI≤ 0.23), but could identify native valve tissue remodeling indicative of aortic valve disease.

publication date

  • June 29, 2018

keywords

  • Tissue engineered heart valves
  • aortic valve
  • calcification
  • fibrosa
  • oscillatory shear index
  • oscillatory shear stress
  • physiologically-relevant
  • pulsatile flow
  • stem cells
  • tissue remodeling
  • valvular phenotype

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)