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List of works by Heather N Hayenga

An agent-based model of leukocyte transendothelial migration during atherogenesis

scientific article

Differential regulation of neutrophil CD18 integrin function by di- and tri-valent cations: manganese vs. gadolinium

scientific article published on 4 March 2008

Ensuring congruency in multiscale modeling: towards linking agent based and continuum biomechanical models of arterial adaptation

scientific article

Human neutrophil cytoskeletal dynamics and contractility actively contribute to trans-endothelial migration

scientific article (publication date: 2013)

Mechanobiological model of arterial growth and remodeling.

scientific article published on 19 August 2017

Multiscale Computational Modeling in Vascular Biology: From Molecular Mechanisms to Tissue-Level Structure and Function

Osteogenic potential of poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(dimethylsiloxane) hybrid hydrogels

scientific article

PEGDA hydrogels with patterned elasticity: Novel tools for the study of cell response to substrate rigidity

scientific article published on February 2010

Regional Atherosclerotic Plaque Properties in ApoE–/– Mice Quantified by Atomic Force, Immunofluorescence, and Light Microscopy

scientific article published on 11 August 2011

Relative impact of form-induced stress vs. uniaxial alignment on multipotent stem cell myogenesis

scientific article published on 11 July 2012

Shape-Morphing Chromonic Liquid Crystal Hydrogels

article

Stiffness Increases Mononuclear Cell Transendothelial Migration

Substrate Stiffness Regulates the Behavior of Human Monocyte-Derived Macrophages

article published in 2015

Substrate elasticity regulates the behavior of human monocyte-derived macrophages

Targeting HIF-1α/PDK1 Axis by Dichloroacetate (DCA) Suppresses Bleomycin-induced Pulmonary Fibrosis

scientific article published on 15 September 2017

Toward a multi-scale computational model of arterial adaptation in hypertension: verification of a multi-cell agent based model.

scientific article

p66Shc couples mechanical signals to RhoA through FAK-dependent recruitment of p115-RhoGEF and GEF-H1.

scientific article