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A Bibliometric and Visualized Analysis of Cardiac Regeneration Over a 20-Year Period

Journal

FRONTIERS IN CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.789503

Keywords

cardiac regeneration; bibliometric analysis; cardiomyocyte proliferation; induced pluripotent stem cell; extracellular vesicles; direct cardiac reprogramming; macrophages; microRNAs

Funding

  1. Joint Funds of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1908205]

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Recent research suggests that cardiac regeneration has the potential to treat heart failure. The field is rapidly developing, with key topics including cardiomyocyte proliferation, stem cells, exosomes, cardiac reprogramming, and macrophages. The United States and Harvard University are leading in research output in this area.
Background: Recent research has suggested that cardiac regeneration may have the widely applicable potential of treating heart failure (HF). A comprehensive understanding of the development status of this field is conducive to its development. However, no bibliometric analysis has summarized this field properly. We aimed to analyze cardiac regeneration-related literature over 20 years and provide valuable insights.Methods: Publications were collected from the Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC). Microsoft Excel, VOSviewer, CiteSpace, and alluvial generator were used to analyze and present the data.Results: The collected 11,700 publications showed an annually increasing trend. The United States and Harvard University were the leading force among all the countries and institutions. The majority of articles were published in Circulation Research, and Circulation was the most co-cited journal. According to co-citation analysis, burst detection and alluvial flow map, cardiomyocyte proliferation, stem cells, such as first-and second-generation, extracellular vesicles especially exosomes, direct cardiac reprogramming, macrophages, microRNAs, and inflammation have become more and more popular recently.Conclusions: Cardiac regeneration remains a research hotspot and develops rapidly. How to modify cardiac regeneration endogenously and exogenously may still be the hotspot in the future and should be discussed more deeply.

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