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Title of Journal: J of Cardiovasc Trans Res

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Abbravation: Journal of Cardiovascular Translational Research

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Springer US

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DOI

10.1007/bf02453930

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1937-5395

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Models of Ventricular Structure and Function Revie

Authors: Paul P Lunkenheimer Peter Niederer Damian SanchezQuintana Margarita Murillo Morten Smerup
Publish Date: 2012/12/28
Volume: 6, Issue: 2, Pages: 176-186
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Abstract

The architectural arrangement of cardiomyocytes aggregated together within the ventricular walls remains controversial Two models currently attract clinical attention with neither model standing rigorous anatomical scrutiny The first is based on the notion that ventricular mass can be unraveled consistently to produce a unique myocardial band The second model was initially based on the notion that cardiomyocytes were bundled together in uniform fashion with fibrous shelves interposed in transmural fashion This concept was subsequently modified to accept the fact that the fibrous matrix supporting the cardiomyocytes within the ventricular walls does not form transmural sheets Current observations demonstrate that not all cardiomyocytes are aggregated together in tangential fashion A significant netting component is aligned in obliquely intruding and transversal fashion The interaction between the tangential and transversal chains of cardiomyocytes with the fibrous matrix produces antagonistic forces with both unloading and auxotonic forces necessary to explain normal and abnormal cardiodynamics This article is part of a JCTR special issue on Cardiac Anatomy


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Other Papers In This Journal:

  1. Molecular Cardiology in Translation: Gene, Cell and Chemical-Based Experimental Therapeutics for the Failing Heart
  2. A Review of Human Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Cardiomyocytes for High-Throughput Drug Discovery, Cardiotoxicity Screening, and Publication Standards
  3. Bone-Marrow-Derived Side Population Cells for Myocardial Regeneration
  4. Short-Term Adjuvant Therapy with Terminalia arjuna Attenuates Ongoing Inflammation and Immune Imbalance in Patients with Stable Coronary Artery Disease: In Vitro and In Vivo Evidence
  5. Improvement in Cardiovascular Risk Prediction with Electronic Health Records
  6. Emerging MRI Methods in Translational Cardiovascular Research
  7. Letter from the Editors
  8. Determinants of Delayed Preconditioning Against Myocardial Stunning in Chronically Instrumented Pigs
  9. Stem Cell Therapy Trials: A Call for Standardization
  10. A Guide for a Cardiovascular Genomics Biorepository: the CATHGEN Experience
  11. Distinguishing Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy-Associated Mutations from Background Genetic Noise
  12. Progenitor Cells Confer Plasticity to Cardiac Valve Endothelium
  13. Review of Stem Cell-Based Therapy for the Treatment of Cardiovascular Disease
  14. Right Ventricular Failure—A Continuing Problem in Patients with Left Ventricular Assist Device Support
  15. Clinical, Laboratory, and Pacing Predictors of CRT Response
  16. Deep Phenotyping of Systemic Arterial Hemodynamics in HFpEF (Part 1): Physiologic and Technical Considerations
  17. Renal Denervation: A Novel Non-pharmacological Approach in Heart Failure
  18. Oxidative Stress, Nox Isoforms and Complications of Diabetes—Potential Targets for Novel Therapies
  19. Why Is Infarct Expansion Such an Elusive Therapeutic Target?
  20. ST2-Based Precision Medicine in Device Management: the Next Frontier Beyond MADIT-CRT?
  21. Letter from the Editors

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