Molinaroli College of Engineering and Computing
Faculty and Staff
Tarek Shazly
| Title: | Professor Affiliate faculty in Mechanical Engineering  | 
                                 
| Department: | Biomedical Engineering Molinaroli College of Engineering and Computing  | 
                                 
| Email: | shazly@cec.sc.edu | 
| Phone: | 803-777-4678 | 
| Fax: | 803-777-0106 | 
| Office: | 300 Main Street  Room A212 Columbia, SC 29208  | 
                                 
| Resources: | Google Scholar | 

Background
Research Area 1: Interactions between implanted polymeric materials and soft tissues
My early work was focused on understanding soft tissue-material interactions for the
                                 purpose of optimizing surgical sealant performance. The publications that emerged
                                 from this line of inquiry impacted the field in two distinct ways. First, we provided
                                 the initial demonstration that adhesion is a tissue-specific phenomenon that can be
                                 exploited in advanced material design. Second, these and related publications established
                                 novel design strategies to enhance adhesion strength without compromising material
                                 biocompatibility – the power in these strategies is that they can be generalized across
                                 material systems and surgical sealant applications.
Research Area 2: Characterization, assessment, and modeling of endovascular technologies
Endovascular technologies such as drug-eluting stents, erodible scaffolds, and drug-coated
                                 balloons have steadily evolved over the past 40 years. Multidisciplinary research
                                 approaches are needed to design, optimize, and evaluate emergent devices, typically
                                 requiring consideration of hemodynamics, drug pharmacokinetics, material mechanics,
                                 and device degradation/erosion kinetics. To accommodate this inherent complexity in
                                 the face of rapid device development, regulatory agencies have begun to expect and
                                 nearly require predictive computational models which clearly explain the mechanism-of-action
                                 and potential risk of new technologies. To meet this field demand, our work has been
                                 focused on the development of finite element-based computational models and design/deployment
                                 strategies to facilitate the continued advancement of endovascular technologies and
                                 their safe introduction into clinical practice.  
Research Area 3: Experimental and theoretical biomechanical studies on native and
                                    engineered blood vessels
The identification of constitutive mechanical models of vascular tissue is essential
                                    for quantifying the local environment of mechanosensitive vascular cells in normal
                                    and disease states, understanding mechanically-mediated vascular tissue remodeling,
                                    and providing a basis for the engineering of vascular tissue substitutes. Publications
                                    in these areas have been impactful in terms of providing data and models for previously
                                    understudied yet critical regions of the circulatory system, applying continuum-mechanical
                                    principles to explain intra-vessel variations in geometry, properties, and composition,
                                    and introducing tissue-engineered constructs which exhibit enhanced matrix elaboration
                                    and thus potential as vascular substitutes.   
Education
- Ph.D., Bio- and Polymeric Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2009
 - S.M., Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2007
 - M.S., Bioengineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2004
 - B.S., Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2001