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Journal of Development in Bioengineering and Biosciences

0009-0001-9727-6809

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Publications by 0009-0001-9727-6809

2 publications found • Active 2026-2026

2026

2 publications

Evaluating the Limitations of Animal Models in Antihypertensive Drug

with Disha Kalpesh Jain
6/27/2026
pp. 1-9

This report critically evaluates the principal animal models used in antihypertensive drug development and the systematic factors underlying the persistent gap between preclinical efficacy and clinical outcomes. Three model systems are examined, the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), the Dahl salt-sensitive rat, and renovascular (two-kidney and one-kidney one-clip) models, assessing their experimental utility, translational limitations, and ethical implications against human essential hypertension. Although each has yielded foundational mechanistic insight and supported major drug classes, their collective predictive validity is constrained by genetic homogeneity, the absence of common comorbidities (obesity, type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease), a pronounced bias toward male-only cohorts, short experimental timeframes, and interspecies divergence in key signalling pathways. Inconsistent experimental design, particularly blood-pressure measurement method and under-reporting of animal sex, further erodes reproducibility and cross-study synthesis. The report situates these issues within the global research landscape, highlighting geographic and ancestry-related blind spots that limit relevance to under-represented populations, and within the Three Rs and current UK/EU regulatory and data-protection frameworks. Emerging bridging strategies, CRISPR-Cas9 models incorporating human-relevant blood-pressure QTLs, iPSC-derived vascular constructs and vessel-on-chip systems, and multi-omics integration with human cohort data are evaluated as routes to reducing translational attrition. It concludes that closing the translational gap requires not only better models but mandatory sex-disaggregated design, rigorous transparent reporting, validated comorbid models, and reform of regulatory and ethical review, an institutional challenge as much as a scientific one.

ATRIAL FIBRILLATION AND PSYCHOSOCIAL STRESS: Epidemiology, Risk, Mechanisms and Future Directions

with Disha Kalpesh Jain
5/22/2026
pp. 1-9

Atrial fibrillation (AF), the most common cardiac arrhythmia links to significant morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs through typical risks like ageing, hypertension, and structural heart disease. Recent studies show chronic psychosocial stress, negative emotions, and mental health factors in AF susceptibility. This review integrates AF epidemiology, focusing on mental stress and adverse emotional states interacts with atrial electrophysiology. Key mechanisms include sympathetic upregulation, parasympathetic attenuation, HPA axis overdrive, inflammation, and myocardial remodelling. Observational data associate persistent stress with higher AF incidence yet causation and stress reduction effectiveness remain uncertain. Targeting modifiable psychosocial factors mat contribute to improve risk stratification management and quality of life.

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