Swine disease models are essential for mimicry of human metabolic and vascular pathophysiology, thereby enabling high-fidelity translation to human medicine. The worldwide epidemic of obesity, metabolic disease, and diabetes has prompted the focus on these diseases in this review. We highlight the remarkable similarity between Ossabaw miniature swine and humans with metabolic syndrome and atherosclerosis. Although the evidence is strongest for swine models of coronary artery disease, findings are generally applicable to any vascular bed. We discuss the major strengths and weaknesses of swine models. The development of vascular imaging is an example of optimal vascular engineering in swine. Although challenges regarding infrastructure and training of engineers in the use of swine models exist, opportunities are ripe for gene editing, studies of molecular mechanisms, and use of swine in coronary artery imaging and testing of devices that can move quickly to human clinical studies.
CITATION STYLE
Sturek, M., Alloosh, M., & Sellke, F. W. (2020, June 4). Swine Disease Models for Optimal Vascular Engineering. Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-bioeng-082919-053009
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.