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Emergence (from chaos?) of regulatory order in the transplanted heart
Conference proceeding

Emergence (from chaos?) of regulatory order in the transplanted heart

J.Y Kresh
2001 Conference Proceedings of the 23rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, v 2, pp 1543-1545 vol.2
2001

Abstract

Automatic control Cardiology Chaos Control systems Educational institutions Heart rate Heart rate variability Pacemakers Rhythm Surgery
The principles by which "emergent properties" and functional order of self-organizing system, such as the heart, achieve homeodynamic stability provide a non-reductionist framework for understanding how biological systems adapt to imposed internal and external stresses, i.e., ischemia, organ/tissue replacement. Thus, the newly emergent dynamics of cardiac rhythm arising after heart transplantation may represent a more stable, versatile and adaptive regulatory order.

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Web of Science research areas
Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems
Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications
Engineering, Biomedical
Neurosciences
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