05
February
2013
|
00:00 AM
Europe/Amsterdam
Dr. Anne Robertson receives NIH R21 grant to study hemodynamics and wall structure in cerebral aneurysms
PITTSBURGH (February 15, 2013) ...
Anne Robertson, PhD
has been awarded a $423,852 R21 grant from the
National Institute of Health
for a research program entitled "The link between hemodynamics and wall structure in cerebral aneurysms." Her research team includes
Juan Cebral, PhD
of George Mason University,
Khaled Abdel Aziz, MD
of Allegheny General Hospital, and
Simon Watkins, PhD
of the University of Pittsburgh
Center for Biological Imaging
.
Cerebral aneurysms are pathological enlargements of the walls of cerebral arteries and estimated to exist in 5-8% of the adult population. Their spontaneous rupture is responsible for 80% of subarachnoid hemorrhagic strokes, a devastating disease with high mortality and disability rates This multi-disciplinary team will use an integrated, multi-scale approach to determine the link between aneurysm blood flow, wall structure and wall strength. The long-term objectives of the research team are to establish new pharmacological based treatment methods for cerebral aneurysms and improve clinical treatments that function by altering flow in the aneurysm dome.
Dr. Robertson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of Pittsburgh Swanson School of Engineering. Dr. Robertson's research interests are in continuum mechanics with particular emphasis on (i) Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluid dynamics, (ii) cerebral vascular disease, and (iii) constitutive modeling of soft biological tissues. She earned her BS in mechanical engineering from Cornell University and her MS and PhD in mechanical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley.
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Cerebral aneurysms are pathological enlargements of the walls of cerebral arteries and estimated to exist in 5-8% of the adult population. Their spontaneous rupture is responsible for 80% of subarachnoid hemorrhagic strokes, a devastating disease with high mortality and disability rates This multi-disciplinary team will use an integrated, multi-scale approach to determine the link between aneurysm blood flow, wall structure and wall strength. The long-term objectives of the research team are to establish new pharmacological based treatment methods for cerebral aneurysms and improve clinical treatments that function by altering flow in the aneurysm dome.
Dr. Robertson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of Pittsburgh Swanson School of Engineering. Dr. Robertson's research interests are in continuum mechanics with particular emphasis on (i) Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluid dynamics, (ii) cerebral vascular disease, and (iii) constitutive modeling of soft biological tissues. She earned her BS in mechanical engineering from Cornell University and her MS and PhD in mechanical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley.
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Contact: Paul Kovach