- Are you inspired by the contribution of engineering methods to solve actually relevant clinical and healthcare problems?
- Are you fascinated by the use of model predictive subject specific decision support in clinical and health care decision-taking?
- Are you intrigued by the functional adaptations that occur in the human body as a result of disease, a disorder or an intervention?
The Cardiovascular Biomechanics group of the Department of Biomedical Engineering would like to welcome you to run a line of research and education in cardiovascular biomechanics with a focus on pathophysiology and disease progression.
There is a critical need to study cardiac and vascular changes that may occur over time due to diseases, disorders, lifestyle, exercise or medical interventions. Our goal is to gain a deeper insight into cardiac and vascular (mal)adaptations, and to learn patient disease trajectories. To achieve this, more accurate model-based predictions of disease progression are required that provide better insights into the impact of pathological, interventional and lifestyle changes on cardiovascular tissue mechanics and function. In addition, we also aim to gain a refined understanding of cardiovascular pathophysiology within the broader context of the entire cardiovascular system, taking into account the interconnections and interactions among different components. Therefore, we seek
to recruit an assistant professor on cardiovascular biomechanics with a focus on pathophysiology and disease progression.This new assistant professor gets the chance to establish and expand existing application areas on cardiovascular function and pathology, perinatology, and life-support. In particular, the assistant professor will make key contributions in the areas of modeling cardiovascular diseases (focusing on tissue mechanics, i.e., cardiac and vascular function, vascular disease) and tissue perfusion (coronary pathophysiology, placental dysfunction) by not only developing predictive (patient-specific) computational models, but also validating them using multi-scale
in vitro setups and clinical data (e.g. medical images and functional data) that are representative of the system as a whole. Moreover, the new assistant professor will be supported to ensure the translation of these diagnostic and prognostic models of cardiovascular pathophysiology (Digital Twins) towards the clinic using model optimization and hybrid modeling strategies that currently exist within the Cardiovascular Biomechanics group (CVBM).
Embedding within the departmentCardiovascular biomechanicsThe current research lines of the Cardiovascular Biomechanics (CVBM) group led by Prof. Huberts are computational and experimental biomechanical analysis of the cardiovascular system and its application to clinical diagnosis, prognosis and intervention, cardiovascular prostheses, extracorporeal systems, medical devices, and related decision support systems. Inherent to the group's approach is the testing of these models and devices using data obtained from their
in vitro setups, from isolated (slaughterhouse)
in vivo beating heart experiments, and clinical data from animals and patients, obtained in collaboration with academic and clinical partners. The group is closely associated with the Photoacoustics & Ultrasound Laboratory PULS/e research group headed by Prof. Richard Lopata, which originated from the Cardiovascular Biomechanics group, but has now developed into an independent research group focusing on photoacoustic and ultrasound imaging (also beyond cardiovascular applications) and biomechanical model-based analysis of the imaging data. The latter provides the strong link between the two groups.
The Cardiovascular Biomechanics group distinguishes itself within the department by its strong connections with clinicians, in particular at the Catharina hospital (Prof. Pim Tonino, Prof. Marc van Sambeek, Prof. Lukas Dekker, Dr Marcel van 't Veer), Maxima Medical Center (Prof. Oei, Prof. van Rijn, Prof. Kemps), UMCU (Dr. Krings, Dr. Jacob), and Maastricht UMC (Prof. Delhaas, Dr. Snoeijs, Dr. Sels, Dr. Bidar). The group also plays a leading role in the Medical Engineering master offered in collaboration with MUMC, both in a coordinating role and as the host of many ME master graduation projects. In short, the Cardiovascular Biomechanics group provides an important and distinctive contribution to education and research in the department of Biomedical Engineering.
Possible collaborationsWithin the department, excellent opportunities for collaboration exist in the areas of ultrasound imaging and modelling (Prof. Lopata), image analysis (Prof. Pluim), systems biology (Prof. van Riel),
in vivo sensing (Prof. Prins) and cardiovascular regeneration and mechanobiology (Prof. Loerakker, Prof. Bouten, Prof van Rijn). Strong collaborations are also envisioned with top-clinical hospitals in the Brainport (MMC and CZE) region and its medical device industry, e.g. as part of the e/MTIC program: (
https://www.tue.nl/en/research/research-groups/eaisi/eaisi-business-operations/eindhoven-medtech-innovation-center/).