logo
episode-header-image
Feb 2025
32m 37s

The future of coronary arteries

Stanford Engineering
About this episode

Guest Kristy Red-Horse is a biologist who specializes in coronary artery development and disease. She says the latest advances in treatment of blockages could do away with invasive bypass surgeries in favor of growing new arteries using molecules like CXCL12, known to promote artery regrowth in mice. Red-Horse explains how leaps forward in medical imaging, expanding atlases of gene expressions, and new drug delivery mechanisms could someday lead to trials in humans. But, before that day can arrive, much work remains, as Red-Horse tells host Russ Altman in this episode of Stanford Engineering’s The Future of Everything podcast.

Have a question for Russ? Send it our way in writing or via voice memo, and it might be featured on an upcoming episode. Please introduce yourself, let us know where you're listening from, and share your quest. You can send questions to thefutureofeverything@stanford.edu.

Episode Reference Links:

Connect With Us:

Chapters:

(00:00:00) Introduction

Russ Altman introduces Kristy Red-Horse, a professor of biology at Stanford University.

(00:03:46) Replacing Open-Heart Surgery

Why bypass surgery is invasive, risky, and requires long recovery.

(00:05:09) Challenges in Artery Growth

The difficulty of targeting artery growth with medical interventions.

(00:07:32) The Role of Collateral Arteries

Definition and function of collateral arteries as natural bypass.

(00:09:37) Triggers for Natural Bypass Formation

Genetic factors that may influence the growth of these bypass arteries.

(00:10:49) Unique Properties of Coronary Arteries

Challenges of ensuring artificial growth replicates natural artery function.

(00:13:04) The Discovery of CXCL12

A key molecule that stimulates collateral artery formation.

(00:16:16) Precise Artery Growth Control

The results of targeted CXCL12 injections into mice hearts.

(00:17:32) CXCL12’s Overlooked Role

The molecule’s role in the immune system and stem cells.

(00:20:27) Guinea Pigs and Heart Attack Resistance

How guinea pigs naturally develop collaterals.

(00:23:19) Preventing Heart Disease

Using artery growth treatments to target early-stage coronary disease.

(00:25:25) Breakthroughs in Imaging Technology

New technology that enables identification of collateral growth pathways.

(00:27:07) How Collateral Arteries Form

The two mechanisms in which new arteries form.

(00:28:48) The Future of Medical Artery Growth

The possibility of eliminating bypass surgery with targeted artery growth.

Connect With Us:

Episode Transcripts >>> The Future of Everything Website

Connect with Russ >>> Threads / Bluesky / Mastodon

Connect with School of Engineering >>>Twitter/X / Instagram / LinkedIn / Facebook

Up next
Today
Best of: The future of extreme climate events
As fall arrives, many regions experience dramatic weather shifts—think early frosts, storms, or unusual temperature swings. Last year, we sat down with Noah Diffenbaugh, an expert on climate change. We discussed the fact that extreme weather is becoming more frequent. Noah pointe ... Show More
32m 46s
Oct 3
The future of the built environment
Rishee Jain is an engineer and an expert in the built environment – the manmade structures of modern life. The future, Jain says, will be a place where everyone has a safe, comfortable place to live and work, and the built environment adapts in real time to our needs. Jain is now ... Show More
33m 40s
Sep 26
The future of the innovation economy
In a special Future of Everything podcast episode recorded live before a studio audience in New York, host Russ Altman talks to three authorities on the innovation economy. His guests – Fei-Fei Li, professor of computer science and co-director of the Stanford Institute for Human- ... Show More
32m 7s
Recommended Episodes
May 2023
The AI Will See You Now: Exploring Biomedical AI and Google’s Med-PaLM2 With Karan Singhal
What if AI could revolutionize healthcare with advanced language learning models? Sarah and Elad welcome Karan Singhal, Staff Software Engineer at Google Research, who specializes in medical AI and the development of MedPaLM2. On this episode, Karan emphasizes the importance of s ... Show More
42m 48s
Oct 2024
Tesla's Road Ahead: The Bitter Lesson in Robotics
What does Rich Sutton’s "Bitter Lesson" reveal about the decisions Tesla is making in its pursuit of autonomy?In this episode, we dive into Tesla’s recent "We, Robot" event, where they unveiled bold plans for the unsupervised full-self-driving Cybercab, Robovan, and Optimus—their ... Show More
36m 46s
Apr 2025
Web3 & the Future of Genetics: AI, Blockchain & Data Ownership with Nillion : 1271
Your DNA, health data, and digital identity are encrypted, monetized, and weaponized against you. But what if there was a way to take it back… and hack the system? In this mind-expanding episode, Dave sits down with two elite hacker-founders—Michael Tiffany, CEO of Fulcra.ai, and ... Show More
1h 30m
Sep 24
AI's Next Frontier: Privacy-Preserving Neural Networks
Jimmy Secretan, CTO of JustWin, explores the latest innovations in privacy-preserving neural networks, and explains how JustWin is leveraging AI to help small businesses win government contracts. He also explores the future directions of AI, and the impact of AI on user autonomy ... Show More
36m 44s
Jan 2025
Sam Altman on AI Superintelligence, U.S. Buys Record Nuclear Power, and Nvidia's Personal AI Supercomputer
We're experimenting and would love to hear from you!In this episode of Discover Daily, we explore groundbreaking developments in AI and energy sectors that are reshaping our technological landscape. OpenAI's dramatic shift towards superintelligence development, following ... Show More
9m 52s
Apr 2025
2027 Intelligence Explosion: Month-by-Month Model — Scott Alexander & Daniel Kokotajlo
Scott and Daniel break down every month from now until the 2027 intelligence explosion.Scott Alexander is author of the highly influential blogs Slate Star Codex and Astral Codex Ten. Daniel Kokotajlo resigned from OpenAI in 2024, rejecting a non-disparagement clause and risking ... Show More
3h 4m
Oct 2
When Will AI Make Scientific Discoveries?
Today’s AI Daily Brief asks when artificial intelligence will begin making real scientific discoveries. We look at Periodic Labs, which just raised more than $300 million to build AI scientists and autonomous labs for physics and chemistry, and Thinking Machines, which is creatin ... Show More
24m 25s
Dec 2024
How Diamond Cooling Could Power the Future of AI, with Akash Systems
In this episode of No Priors, Sarah sits down with Felix Ejeckam and Ty Mitchell, founders of Akash Systems, a company pioneering diamond-based cooling technology for semiconductors used in space applications and large-scale AI data centers. Felix and Ty discuss how their backgro ... Show More
42m 21s
Sep 23
How Microsoft is Fixing the Biggest AI Agent Problem
Want the guide to create AI Agents? get it here: https://clickhubspot.com/fhc Episode 77: Are we nearing a future where AI agents can autonomously tackle our biggest challenges—while remaining efficient, safe, and truly aligned with human goals? Matt Wolfe (https://x.com/mreflow) ... Show More
30m 8s
Apr 2025
Specialized AI brains for physical industry
Everyone wants a piece of general purpose models. Instacart has deployed ChatGPT for recipes and meal planning. The Mayo Clinic is using it to summarize patient records. Schneider Electric is using an OpenAI LLM to generate sustainability reports. With such powerful models, what’ ... Show More
39m 2s