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Featured researches published by Gretel Monreal.


Life Sciences | 2008

Cytoskeletal remodeling of desmin is a more accurate measure of cardiac dysfunction than fibrosis or myocyte hypertrophy

Gretel Monreal; Lisa Nicholson; Bing Han; Mandar S. Joshi; Alistair Phillips; Loren E. Wold; John Anthony Bauer; Mark A. Gerhardt

AIMS Fibrosis and myocyte hypertrophy are classical remodeling parameters in heart failure (HF); however, an intriguing possibility is that myocytes undergo intracellular remodeling which decrease compliance, contributing to diastolic dysfunction. The most obvious candidates are cytoskeletal proteins. The cytoskeletal protein desmin reinforces the sarcomeres, enabling force generation. As a contributor to sarcomere performance, desmin may represent a better appraisal of dysfunction than fibrosis or myocyte hypertrophy. MAIN METHODS HF was induced in sheep via coronary microembolization. Echocardiography was performed at baseline, 4-, and 12-months in HF. Desmin, fibrosis, and myocyte hypertrophy from infarcted LV posterior and noninfarcted LV anterior walls were measured using Western blot, immunohistochemistry, and digital image analysis. Multivariate regression analysis was performed, providing structure/function mechanisms. *p<0.05. KEY FINDINGS EF decreased from 55% to 24%*. LV end-diastolic area (LVEDA) increased 123%* at month-12. Fibrosis increased only in posterior LV whereas myocyte hypertrophy increased in both LV posterior and LV anterior regions but only at month-12. Desmin content progressively increased 121% at month-4 and 182%* at month-12 in both LV posterior and anterior walls. Multivariate linear regression (beta coefficient standardization) demonstrated that desmin was a much better predictor of EF (beta=-0.38*) and LVEDA (beta=0.58*) than fibrosis or myocyte hypertrophy. SIGNIFICANCE Desmin, fibrosis, and myocyte hypertrophy are temporally and spatially heterogeneous in HF. Desmin content more accurately correlated with remodeling than fibrosis or myocyte hypertrophy, suggesting that intra-myocyte responses, likely related to mechanical stretch, are better predictors of LV function and may represent novel targets for therapeutic intervention.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2015

Rotary pump speed modulation for generating pulsatile flow and phasic left ventricular volume unloading in a bovine model of chronic ischemic heart failure

Kevin G. Soucy; Guruprasad A. Giridharan; Young Choi; Michael A. Sobieski; Gretel Monreal; Allen Cheng; Erin M. Schumer; Mark S. Slaughter; Steven C. Koenig

BACKGROUND Rotary blood pumps operate at a constant speed (rpm) that diminishes vascular pulsatility and variation in ventricular end-systolic and end-diastolic volumes, which may contribute to adverse events, including aortic insufficiency and gastrointestinal bleeding. In this study, pump speed modulation algorithms for generating pulsatility and variation in ventricular end-systolic and end-diastolic volumes were investigated in an ischemic heart failure (IHF) bovine model (n = 10) using a clinically implanted centrifugal-flow left ventricular assist device (LVAD). METHODS Hemodynamic and hematologic measurements were recorded during IHF baseline, constant pumps speeds, and asynchronous (19-60 cycles/min) and synchronous (copulse and counterpulse) pump speed modulation profiles using low relative pulse speed (±25%) of 3,200 ± 800 rpm and high relative pulse speed (±38%) of 2,900 ± 1,100 rpm. End-organ perfusion, hemodynamics, and pump parameters were measured to characterize pulsatility, myocardial workload, and LVAD performance for each speed modulation profile. RESULTS Speed modulation profiles augmented aortic pulse pressure, surplus hemodynamic energy, and end-organ perfusion (p < 0.01) compared with operation at constant speed. Left ventricular external work and myocardial oxygen consumption were significantly reduced compared with IHF baseline (p < 0.01) but at the expense of higher LVAD power consumption. CONCLUSIONS Pump speed modulation increases pulsatility and improves cardiac function and end-organ perfusion, but the asynchronous mode provides the technologic advantage of sensorless control. Investigation of asynchronous pump speed modulation during long-term support is warranted to test the hypothesis that operating an LVAD with speed modulation will minimize adverse events in patients supported by an LVAD that may be associated with long-term operation at a constant pump speed.


Asaio Journal | 2015

Left ventricular volume unloading with axial and centrifugal rotary blood pumps.

Guruprasad A. Giridharan; Steven C. Koenig; Kevin G. Soucy; Young Choi; Tohid Pirbodaghi; Carlo R. Bartoli; Gretel Monreal; Michael A. Sobieski; Erin M. Schumer; Allen Cheng; Mark S. Slaughter

Axial (AX) and centrifugal (CFG) rotary blood pumps have gained clinical acceptance for the treatment of advanced heart failure. Differences between AX and CFG designs and mechanism of blood flow delivery may offer clinical advantages. In this study, pump characteristics, and acute physiologic responses during support with AX (HeartMate II) and CFG (HVAD) left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) were investigated in mock loop and chronic ischemic heart failure bovine models. In the mock loop model, pump performance was characterized over a range of pump speeds (HeartMate II: 7,000–11,000 rpm, HVAD: 2,000–3,600 rpm) and fluid viscosities (2.7 cP, 3.2 cP, 3.7 cP). In the ischemic heart failure bovine model, hemodynamics, echocardiography, and end-organ perfusion were investigated. CFG LVAD had a flatter HQ curve, required less power, and had a more linear flow estimation relation than AX LVAD. The flow estimation error for the AX LVAD (±0.9 L/min at 2.7 cP, ±0.7 L/min at 3.2 cP, ±0.8 L/min at 3.7 cP) was higher than the CFG LVAD (±0.5 L/min at 2.7 cP, ±0.2 L/min at 3.2 cP, ±0.5 L/min at 3.7 cP). No differences in acute hemodynamics, echocardiography, or end-organ perfusion between AX and CFG LVAD over a wide range of support were statistically discernible. These findings suggest no pronounced acute differences in LV volume unloading between AX and CFG LVAD.


Asaio Journal | 2014

Early feasibility testing and engineering development of the transapical approach for the HeartWare MVAD ventricular assist system.

Daniel Tamez; Jeffrey A. LaRose; Charles R. Shambaugh; Katherine Chorpenning; Kevin G. Soucy; Michael A. Sobieski; Leslie C. Sherwood; Guruprasad A. Giridharan; Gretel Monreal; Steven C. Koenig; Mark S. Slaughter

Implantation of ventricular assist devices (VADs) for the treatment of end-stage heart failure (HF) falls decidedly short of clinical demand, which exceeds 100,000 HF patients per year. Ventricular assist device implantation often requires major surgical intervention with associated risk of adverse events and long recovery periods. To address these limitations, HeartWare, Inc. has developed a platform of miniature ventricular devices with progressively reduced surgical invasiveness and innovative patient peripherals. One surgical implant concept is a transapical version of the miniaturized left ventricular assist device (MVAD). The HeartWare MVAD Pump is a small, continuous-flow, full-support device that has a displacement volume of 22 ml. A new cannula configuration has been developed for transapical implantation, where the outflow cannula is positioned across the aortic valve. The two primary objectives for this feasibility study were to evaluate anatomic fit and surgical approach and efficacy of the transapical MVAD configuration. Anatomic fit and surgical approach were demonstrated using human cadavers (n = 4). Efficacy was demonstrated in acute (n = 2) and chronic (n = 1) bovine model experiments and assessed by improvements in hemodynamics, biocompatibility, flow dynamics, and histopathology. Potential advantages of the MVAD Pump include flow support in the same direction as the native ventricle, elimination of cardiopulmonary bypass, and minimally invasive implantation.


Asaio Journal | 2014

Development of an extracellular matrix delivery system for effective intramyocardial injection in ischemic tissue.

Mark S. Slaughter; Kevin G. Soucy; Robert G. Matheny; Beecher C. Lewis; Michael F. Hennick; Young Choi; Gretel Monreal; Michael A. Sobieski; Guruprasad A. Giridharan; Steven C. Koenig

Biomaterials with direct intramyocardial injection devices have been developed and are being investigated as a potential cardiac regenerative therapy for end-stage ischemic heart failure. Decellularized extracellular matrix (ECM) has been shown to improve cardiac function and attenuate or reverse pathologic remodeling cascades. CorMatrix Cardiovascular, Inc. has developed a porcine small intestinal submucosa-derived particulate extracellular matrix (P-ECM) and ECM Delivery System to provide uniform and controlled intramyocardial delivery of the injectable P-ECM material into infarcted regions. The CorMatrix ECM Delivery System is composed of a Multi-Needle P-ECM Syringe Assembly, Automated Injection Controller, and Tissue Depth Measurement System (portable ultrasound). Feasibility of the P-ECM delivery system was tested intraoperatively in a chronic ischemic heart failure bovine model (n = 11), and demonstrated the ability to control injection volume (0.1–1.0 ml) and depth of penetration (3–5 mm) under regulated injection pressure (150 psi CO2) into the ischemic region. Targeted intramyocardial delivery of P-ECM may improve efficacy and enable development of novel patient-specific therapy.


Asaio Journal | 2014

Large animal models for left ventricular assist device research and development.

Gretel Monreal; Leslie C. Sherwood; Michael A. Sobieski; Guruprasad A. Giridharan; Mark S. Slaughter; Steven C. Koenig

In vivo preclinical testing of left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) warrants a large animal model that faithfully simulates human etiology. Although LVAD recipients are in end-stage heart failure (HF), healthy, young animals have served as the experimental platform for most LVAD research and development (R&D) to demonstrate device safety, reliability, and biocompatibility. The rapidly growing HF epidemic, donor heart shortage, and clinical acceptance of LVAD for bridge-to-transplant therapy (BTT) has led to the expanded role of LVAD for destination therapy and bridge-to-recovery therapy. New paradigms for the clinical care of these emerging patient populations are needed. Clinically relevant, robust, and reproducible large animal models of HF are required to demonstrate efficacy, investigate physiologic responses, elucidate genetic, molecular, and cellular mechanism(s), and develop LVAD control strategies. The animal model must be comparable in size, anatomical structure, and phenotype; the technique used to initiate HF must reflect the clinical portrait, should be technically and financially feasible, result in predictable, stable, and irreversible HF, and demonstrate bidirectionality of the remodeling cascade. In this review, large animal species commonly used in cardiac research, techniques used to create chronic HF, and the combined applicability to preclinical LVAD R&D studies are presented.


Asaio Journal | 2015

Hemodynamic changes and retrograde flow in LVAD failure.

Guruprasad A. Giridharan; Steven C. Koenig; Kevin G. Soucy; Young Choi; Tohid Pirbodaghi; Carlo R. Bartoli; Gretel Monreal; Michael A. Sobieski; Erin M. Schumer; Allen Cheng; Mark S. Slaughter

In the event of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) failure, we hypothesized that rotary blood pumps will experience significant retrograde flow and induce adverse physiologic responses. Catastrophic LVAD failure was investigated in computer simulation with pulsatile, axial, and centrifugal LVAD, mock flow loop with pulsatile (PVAD) and centrifugal (ROTAFLOW), and healthy and chronic ischemic heart failure bovine models with pulsatile (PVAD), axial (HeartMate II), and centrifugal (HVAD) pumps. Simulated conditions were LVAD “off” with outflow graft clamped (baseline), LVAD “off” with outflow graft unclamped (LVAD failure), and LVAD “on” (5 L/min). Hemodynamics (aortic and ventricular blood pressures, LVAD flow, and left ventricular volume), echocardiography (cardiac volumes), and end-organ perfusion (regional blood flow microspheres) were measured and analyzed. Retrograde flow was observed with axial and centrifugal rotary pumps during LVAD failure in computer simulation (axial = -3.4 L/min, centrifugal = -2.8 L/min), mock circulation (pulsatile = -0.1 L/min, centrifugal = -2.7 L/min), healthy (pulsatile = -1.2 ± 0.3 L/min, axial = -2.2 ± 0.2 L/min, centrifugal = -1.9 ± 0.3 L/min), and ischemic heart failure (centrifugal = 2.2 ± 0.7 L/min) bovine models for all test conditions (p < 0.05). Differences between axial and centrifugal LVAD were statistically indiscernible. Retrograde flow increased ventricular end-systolic and end-diastolic volumes and workload, and decreased myocardial and end-organ perfusion during LVAD failure compared with baseline, LVAD support, and pulsatile LVAD failure.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2010

Right ventricular remodeling in restrictive ventricular septal defect.

Gretel Monreal; Dane J. Youtz; Alistair Phillips; Mahala E. Eyman; Matthew W. Gorr; Christina Velten; Pamela A. Lucchesi; Loren E. Wold; Mark A. Gerhardt

Restrictive ventricular septal defect (rVSD) presents with little/no hemodynamic aberrations despite a patent septal defect. Clinically, these patients are observed with the hope that the defect will functionally close over time without the need for surgical repair and development of heart failure. Without evidence supporting a definitive therapeutic strategy, rVSD patients may have increased risk of a poor outcome. We tested the hypothesis that rVSD results in subclinical RV diastolic dysfunction and molecular remodeling. Five pigs underwent surgical rVSD creation. Echocardiography, hemodynamics, myocyte contractility experiments, and proteomics/Western blot were performed 6-weeks post-rVSD and in controls. *p<0.05. LV and RV hemodynamics in rVSD were comparable to controls. The tricuspid valve early/late diastolic inflow velocity ratio (TV E/A ratio) decreased from 1.6+/-0.05 in controls to 1.0+/-0.08* in rVSD, indicating RV diastolic dysfunction. rVSD RV myocytes showed abnormalities in contraction (departure velocity (Vd) -51%*, Vd time +55%*) and relaxation (return velocity (Vr) -50%*, Vr time +62%*). Mitochondrial proteins (fatty acid, TCA cycle) increased 2-fold*, indicating heightened RV work. Desmin protein upregulated 285%* in rVSD RV myocardium, suggesting cytoskeletal remodeling. rVSD causes RV diastolic dysfunction, myocyte functional impairment, and mitochondrial/cytoskeletal protein upregulation in our model. Desmin upregulation may hinder sarcomeric organization/relaxation, representing a key subclinical early marker for future RV dysfunction. TV E/A measurements are a non-invasive modality to assess rVSD patients for diastolic dysfunction. Translational research applications may lead to fundamental changes in the clinical management of rVSD by providing evidence for early repair of the defect.


Asaio Journal | 2007

Left ventricular assist device support induces acute changes in myocardial electrolytes in heart failure.

Gretel Monreal; Mark A. Gerhardt

The regulation of myocardial electrolyte concentrations is critical to proper cardiac function. Myocardial ischemia is associated with deranged ion transport. Left ventricular assist device (LVAD) therapy improves myocyte bioenergetics in chronic heart failure (CHF), which may manifest as electrolyte alterations; however, rapid electrolyte shifts may place critically ill patients at risk for arrhythmias upon initiation of LVAD support. We examine the effect of incremental increases in LVAD support on acute changes in myocardial arteriovenous electrolytes in CHF. CHF was induced in sheep via coronary microembolization. Four months later, sheep underwent acute LVAD implantation. LVAD support was incrementally increased (0%, 25%, 50%, 75% support). Paired arterial and coronary sinus blood samples were obtained at each increment and analyzed for K+, Ca2+, and Na+ concentrations. Arteriovenous electrolyte concentrations (mmol/l) were inverted in CHF before LVAD support: K+ (–0.08), Ca2+ (−0.04), and Na+ (0.04). These imbalances were corrected within 20 minutes and with as little as 25% LVAD support: K+ (0.06), Ca2+ (0.012), and Na+ (–0.80). The arteriovenous differences further widened as LVAD support was increased. In conclusion, LVAD support in CHF induces acute alterations in myocardial electrolytes. Rapid shifts myocardial arteriovenous electrolyte balances during LVAD support may in part explain the incidence of post-LVAD arrhythmias observed clinically in humans.


Asaio Journal | 2014

Early feasibility testing and engineering development of a sutureless beating heart connector for left ventricular assist devices.

Steven C. Koenig; Jorge H. Jimenez; Seth West; Michael A. Sobieski; Young Choi; Gretel Monreal; Guruprasad A. Giridharan; Kevin G. Soucy; Mark S. Slaughter

APK Advanced Medical Technologies (Atlanta, GA) is developing a sutureless beating heart (SBH) left ventricular assist device (LVAD) connector system consisting of anchoring titanium coil, titanium cannula with integrated silicone hemostatic valve, coring and delivery tool, and LVAD locking mechanism to facilitate LVAD inflow surgical procedures. Feasibility testing was completed in human cadavers (n = 4) under simulated normal and hypertensive conditions using saline to observe seal quality in degraded human tissue and assess anatomic fit; acutely in ischemic heart failure bovine model (n = 2) to investigate short-term performance and ease of use; and chronically for 30 days in healthy calves (n = 2) implanted with HeartWare HVAD to evaluate performance and biocompatibility. Complete hemostasis was achieved in human cadavers and animals at LV pressures up to 170 mm Hg. In animals, off-pump (no cardiopulmonary bypass) anchoring of the connector was accomplished in less than 1 minute with no residual bleeding after full delivery and locking of the LVAD; and implant of connector and LVAD were successfully completed in under 10 minutes with total procedure blood loss less than 100 ml. In chronic animals before necropsy, no signs of leakage or disruption at the attachment site were observed at systolic LV pressures >200 mm Hg.

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Kevin G. Soucy

University of Louisville

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Young Choi

University of Louisville

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Alistair Phillips

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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John Anthony Bauer

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Allen Cheng

University of Louisville

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