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John W. Weisel

John W. Weisel

Verified

University of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine

Active 1972–2024

h-index85
Citations25.0k
Papers44679 last 5y
Funding$10.3M
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Research topics

  • Immunology
  • Materials science
  • Medicine
  • Composite material
  • Biomedical engineering
  • Internal medicine
  • Cardiology
  • Surgery
  • Pathology

Selected publications

  • Fracture toughness of fibrin gels as a function of protein volume fraction: Mechanical origins

    Acta Biomaterialia · 2023 · 38 citations

    • Materials science
    • Composite material

    integral that includes dissipative effects due to fluid flow and uses only the constitutive model and overall stretch at crack propagation as input. We show that internal fluid motion, which is not directly measurable, contributes significantly to clot toughness, with its effect increasing as fibrin content increases, because the reduced gel porosity at higher density results in greater expense of energy in fluid motion. Increasing fibrin content (1→10mg/mL) results in a significant increase in clot toughness (3→15 N/m) in accordance with a power law relation reminiscent of cellular solids and elastomeric gels. These results provide a basis for understanding and predicting the tendency for thrombotic embolization. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Fibrin, a naturally occurring biomaterial, is the major determinant of the structural and mechanical integrity of blood clots. We determined that increasing the fibrin content in clots, as in some thrombi and fibrin-based anti-bleeding sealants, results in an increase in clot toughness. Toughness corresponds to the ability to resist rupturing in the presence of a defect. We couple bulk mechanical testing, microstructural measurements, and finite element modeling to capture the force-stretch response of fibrin clots and compute toughness. We show that increased fibrin content in clots reduces porosity and limits fluid motion and that fluid motion drastically alters the clot toughness. These results provide a fundamental understanding of blood clot rupture and could help in rational design of fibrin-containing biomaterials.

  • Rupture of blood clots: Mechanics and pathophysiology

    Science Advances · 2020 · 100 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Medicine
    • Biomedical engineering
    • Pathology

    . Finite element (FE) simulations using fibrin material models that account for forced protein unfolding independently supported this measured toughness and showed that breaking of fibers ahead the crack at a critical stretch is the mechanism of rupture of blood clots, including thrombotic embolization.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Rustem I. Litvinov

    University of Pennsylvania

    282 shared
  • Chandrasekaran Nagaswami

    University of Pennsylvania

    136 shared
  • Valerie Tutwiler

    Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

    66 shared
  • Robert A. S. Ariëns

    University of Leeds

    53 shared
  • Valeri Barsegov

    University of Massachusetts Lowell

    53 shared
  • Peter J. Grant

    University of Leeds

    50 shared
  • Alina D. Peshkova

    University of Pennsylvania

    49 shared
  • Mark Alber

    University of California, Riverside

    44 shared
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