Micha Sam Brickman Raredon, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor of AnesthesiologyCards
About
Research
Overview
Dr. Raredon's research group focuses on the mechanisms governing the behavior of complex multicellular systems and in leveraging these principles to engineer living tissues for regenerative medicine. Our work combines systems biology, stem-cell engineering, materials science, surgical fabrication, and biological engineering. The team is particularly invested in engineering, or controlling the self-organization of, cross-length scale perfusable vascular networks and tissue architecture, and in devising principles of microvascular construction and control that can be applied across organ types. We are a clinically-integrated laboratory with two broadly interconnected goals: the modeling of network-level mechanisms of tissue morphogenesis and phenotype regulation, and the application of those models to the design and fabrication of patient-specific tissues for therapeutic use.
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News & Links
Media
- Photo by Micha Sam Brickman Raredon
Immunostaining of cellular communities at the bronchioalveolar junction in lung tissue
News
- May 19, 2022
A Celebration of Student Research and Faculty Mentorship
- April 16, 2020
Sharing a Ventilator, Sparing a Life: Two Yale Groups Create Different Ways To Maximize Ventilator Capacity in a Crisis
- April 09, 2020Source: Yale School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
With an Urgent Need, Researchers Develop Multi-Patient Ventilators
- December 03, 2019
With Cellular Blueprint for Lungs, Yale Researchers Look Ahead to Organ Regeneration