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How can we get something like this pushed further along, assuming you're not a scientist working on it directly?

With heart failure the number one killer in the United States, I'd like to see these things in every Hospital asap.




> I'd like to see these things in every Hospital asap

Yes sir, right away sir.

Seriously though, Ventricular Assist Devices have been available for decades. I have worked with clients who make them. You can get one today if you have heart failure through your insurance company while you're waiting for a transplant.

When they say: > The reasoning why nature should be used as a model is clear. Currently used blood pumps have many disadvantages: their mechanical parts are susceptible to complications while the patient lacks a physiological pulse, which is assumed to have some consequences for the patient.

In fact, it's not clear at all (always, always remember the Gell-Mann Amnesia effect). The first generations of VADs were pulsatile because they "assumed nature" should be a model and they had many problems in patients.

Then the next generation of continuous rotary pumps came out and are the only ones (in fact only 3 pumps today are used, HeartMate II, HeartMate III and HeartWare HVAD) that last for years. btw 180 days is the typical wait time for a transplant. Then artificial pulsatility was added to the rotary pumps, mostly out of an imaginary need for a pulse, but no one has been able to prove a pulse is necessary.

As this is a project by a materials research group, I'm confident this is a pilot project and their goal will be to improve the lifetime of the materials by X%. That means, it will be a long, long time before this style of pump is found in bodies. Notice they're not assessing thrombosis or hemolysis, etc.

If you sincerely want to reduce heart disease, focus on improving peoples' diets, exercise and stress/sleep. That will have the most effect. For many people, damage is self-inflicted and they ruin enough of their vasculature and organs that a replacement heart won't do any more than a new power supply on a dead motherboard.


>> I'd like to see these things in every Hospital asap

>Yes sir, right away sir.

If I seem a bit emotionally invested in the topic, it's because I am. My dad died from a heart attack a little under two years ago. One of the side-effects for me has been noticing articles about advancements in the field and caring about them more than I used to. If he had died from it before anyone could potentially do anything, that'd be one thing. But that's not what happened. Medical staff was on-site within minutes. They even claimed he was still alive by the time they arrived at the hospital. But still, he died. He was a month shy of 60.

Of course if he had improved his diet and shed some pounds, he might not have found himself in that situation to begin with so early, but given that heart failure is the number one killer in the US, I don't think that answer is good enough by itself. We need to get to the point that we can save people more consistently.

Heart disease killed more than 10 times as many people in 2016 as any sort of gun death in the US. We should be a lot more concerned with solving this problem as a society.

It's not just big guys like my dad who are at risk. My six year old niece has a small heart defect that could be a problem at some point. You'd think that's pretty rare, but according to some studies, that makes her 1 out of 100 kids.

This stuff needs to be fixed.




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