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Rotary blood pumps increasingly are being used in open heart
surgery and in assisted circulation for patients with heart
disease. These rotary devices include vortex (centrifugal) and
axial pumps, which can be utilized in conditions where the use of
conventional pulsatile pumps would entail problems of cost and
size. Rapid progress is now being made in developing new devices
for controlling blood flow within the heart and great vessels as
well as extracorporeally for use in coronary and intensive care
units and, in the future, for long-term use. This book provides
information on the physiology of nonpulsatile circulation, the
development of rotary pump engineering, and the clinical
application of rotary blood pumps. It also presents an overview of
future developments in this important field.
The cardiovascular system transports oxygen and nutrients to all
parts of the body; therefore, any impediment to this system
through, for example, a circulatory disorder, represents a serious
threat to organs, tissues, and cells. Obstructive diseases of
vessels with a diameter of more than 1 mm can be treated by
conventional surgical and interventional approaches; however,
blockages in small vessels with a diameter of less than 1 mm cannot
be treated by conventional methods. As a consequence, therapeutic
ang- genesis and vasculogenesis for the treatment of ischemic
diseases have been widely studied in the last decade. These methods
may contribute to the re pair of intractable cardiovascular
diseases with a main vascular involvement in the body's smallest
vessels. In this book, Hikaru Matsuda and I have tried to summarize
recent Japanese developments in the field of cardiovascular
regeneration therapies using tissue engineering. The Ministry of
Health, Labor, and Welfare of Japan has been encouraging the
National Cardiovascular Center Research Institute to promote
cardiovascular regeneration therapies using such ap proaches.
Therefore, it is with the financial aid and support of research
grants, such as that for Cardiovascular Disease (13C-1 and I6C-6),
Health and Labor Sciences Research Grants (RHGTEFB-genome-005,
RHGTEFB-saisei-003, and CRCD-junkanki-009) and a grant from NEDO of
Japan, that significant progress has been possible."
Rotary blood pumps increasingly are being used in open heart
surgery and in assisted circulation for patients with heart
disease. These rotary devices include vortex (centrifugal) and
axial pumps, which can be utilized in conditions where the use of
conventional pulsatile pumps would entail problems of cost and
size. Rapid progress is now being made in developing new devices
for controlling blood flow within the heart and great vessels as
well as extracorporeally for use in coronary and intensive care
units and, in the future, for long-term use. This book provides
information on the physiology of nonpulsatile circulation, the
development of rotary pump engineering, and the clinical
application of rotary blood pumps. It also presents an overview of
future developments in this important field.
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