Our lab focuses on the effect of blood flow and pressure loading on the avian embryonic heart arches and ventricles. We aim to contribute to the complex biomechanical mechanisms that link vascular morphology to mechanical loading in the LL model. We also maintain a strong clinical and surgical bioengineering research program.
In a recent collaborative study conducted by professorial ops group at Imperial College, image-based finite element modeling and single cell RNA sequencing were used to illustrate the increasing three dimensional myocardia strains in ventricles after left atrial ligation in stage 25. Such knowledge may be translated to fetal cardiovascular interaction in humans. A smaller left ventricular cavity and compression in the entire trabecula recesses were observed with LL intervention.
Furthermore, LL altered the normal ventricular structure and reorientated the appearance of trabecula. In addition, the LL model caused right ventricular cavity enlargement, changes in trabecular structure, and increased myocardial volume load. The LL affects hemodynamic loading in the chick embryo, leading to hypoplastic left heart syndrome.
The elasticity of the normally developing myocardium undergoes changes particularly in the HLHS phenotype. These findings can guide the development of potential treatments for clinical trials, and guide predictive competitional models.