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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.

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(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.

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