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Advances of cardiovascular engineering prompt one to consider
innovative device technology - that is, the development of new
replacement heart valves or engineering of a totally implantable
energy source for an artificial heart. However, these kinds of
advances have often proved unable to achieve a long-lasting benefit
as the cardiovascular field has matured so fast. Cardiovascular
engineering has matured to the point where a major innovation must
not only function, but must continuously function better than
existing devices. This is difficult to accomplish in the complex
cardiovasculature system, in which energy source, biocompatibility,
compliance, and functionality all must be considered. The
maturation of the field is evident from the fact that many
engineered prosthetic systems perform well - for example, heart
valves function for long periods of time, large-vessel vascular
grafts are quite adequate, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation has
significantly prolonged the feasible length of heart bypass and
other surgical operations, and total artificial hearts can be used
as a bridge to transplant without serious complications, yet none
of these systems is as good as the natural ones it replaces. The
reasons for this are many and incompletely understood. The next
stage of progress must be better to alterations understandings of
the various components of vasculature and their response by our
devices, be they at the micro- or macro-circulatory levels, in the
blood, or associated with the vascular wall.
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