Neil Davies

Neil Davies

University of Cape Town

H-index: 28

Africa-South Africa

About Neil Davies

Neil Davies, With an exceptional h-index of 28 and a recent h-index of 19 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Cape Town, specializes in the field of Regenerative Medicine, Myocardial infarction, Angiogenesis, Biomaterials.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Mathematical model of mechano-sensing and mechanically induced collective motility of cells on planar elastic substrates

Modified fibrin hydrogel for sustained delivery of RNAi lipopolyplexes in skeletal muscle

Effect of paclitaxel treatment on cellular mechanics and morphology of human oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma in 2D and 3D environments

Blood derived extracellular vesicles as regenerative medicine therapeutics

Determination of cross-directional and cross-wall variations of passive biaxial mechanical properties of rat myocardia

Understanding regional mechanics of rat myocardia by fitting hyperelatsic models

In silico stress fibre content affects peak strain in cytoplasm and nucleus but not in the membrane for uniaxial substrate stretch

Passive biaxial tensile dataset of three main rat heart myocardia: left ventricle, mid-wall and right ventricle

Neil Davies Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

3173

Citations(since 2020)

1087

Cited By

2491

hIndex(all)

28

hIndex(since 2020)

19

i10Index(all)

48

i10Index(since 2020)

27

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Neil Davies Skills & Research Interests

Regenerative Medicine

Myocardial infarction

Angiogenesis

Biomaterials

Top articles of Neil Davies

Mathematical model of mechano-sensing and mechanically induced collective motility of cells on planar elastic substrates

Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology

2023/6

Modified fibrin hydrogel for sustained delivery of RNAi lipopolyplexes in skeletal muscle

Regenerative Biomaterials

2023/1/17

Effect of paclitaxel treatment on cellular mechanics and morphology of human oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma in 2D and 3D environments

Integrative Biology

2022/6

Blood derived extracellular vesicles as regenerative medicine therapeutics

Biochimie

2022/5

Determination of cross-directional and cross-wall variations of passive biaxial mechanical properties of rat myocardia

Processes

2022/3/24

Understanding regional mechanics of rat myocardia by fitting hyperelatsic models

2021/10/25

In silico stress fibre content affects peak strain in cytoplasm and nucleus but not in the membrane for uniaxial substrate stretch

Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing

2021/9

Passive biaxial tensile dataset of three main rat heart myocardia: left ventricle, mid-wall and right ventricle

2021/8/6

Tendon‐like tether formation for tongue‐base advancement in an ovine model using a novel implant device intended for the surgical management of obstructive sleep apnoea

Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B: Applied Biomaterials

2021/7

Hydrogel Engineering and Conditioned Media Present Two Basic Tools in Cardiovascular Regenerative Medicine

The Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon

2021/1

Analysis of the regenerative capacity of human serum exosomes after a simple multistep separation from lipoproteins

Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine

2021/1

Progressive reinvention or destination lost? Half a century of cardiovascular tissue engineering

2020/9/9

Tissue ingrowth markedly reduces mechanical anisotropy and stiffness in fibre direction of highly aligned electrospun polyurethane scaffolds

Cardiovascular Engineering and Technology

2020/8

Intra-myocardial alginate hydrogel injection acts as a left ventricular mid-wall constraint in swine

Acta biomaterialia

2020/7/15

Electrospun polyester-urethane scaffold preserves mechanical properties and exhibits strain stiffening during in situ tissue ingrowth and degradation

SN Applied Sciences

2020/5

See List of Professors in Neil Davies University(University of Cape Town)

Co-Authors

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