Myocardial Regeneration
Safely regrow the heart’s own muscle from its own biology
The goal is to safely regenerate heart muscle — replacing the cardiomyocytes lost to a heart attack or heart failure by awakening the heart’s own renewal, with no new health problems. Rebuilding the muscle, from the heart’s own biology. This page maps each pathway with the science behind it.
A heart attack can kill a billion heart-muscle cells in hours, and for a century medicine taught that the heart cannot regrow them — it could only scar. That dogma has been overturned: the adult human heart does renew its muscle cells, slowly, throughout life. The frontier is amplifying that renewal — and converting scar back into muscle — from the heart’s own cells. Each pathway below names its science and stage.
We are building the capability to safely regenerate heart muscle: protecting the muscle that remains, awakening the heart’s own cardiomyocyte renewal, converting the heart’s own scar-forming cells back into muscle, and supporting healing signals — all from the heart’s own biology.
Each regeneration pathway — capability, science, and stage
Protecting the muscle that remains Demonstrated — clinical
The science: regeneration begins by protecting surviving heart muscle — restoring its blood supply and easing its workload so it can recover. Protecting cardiac and coronary health preserves the muscle the heart can build on. The grounded foundation.
Awakening the heart’s own renewal Clinical / Frontier
The discovery: the adult human heart renews its muscle cells — about 0.5% per year, nearly 40% over a lifetime (shown by carbon-dating heart cells). Research is working to safely accelerate this natural renewal so the heart rebuilds more of what it loses. Real human biology; amplifying it is the frontier.
Reawakening cardiomyocyte division Frontier
The frontier: the century-old dogma that heart cells cannot divide has been overturned — heart regeneration proceeds mainly through existing cardiomyocytes re-entering the cell cycle. Coaxing the heart’s own muscle cells to divide again is an active laboratory frontier.
Converting scar back into muscle Frontier
The science: rather than adding outside cells, this route guides the heart’s own scar-forming cells (fibroblasts) to convert directly into new muscle cells in place — turning scar into working myocardium, from the body’s own cells. Striking lab science, not yet a human therapy.
Rebuilding heart tissue with bioengineering Frontier
The work: engineered heart tissue grown from the body’s own cells aims to rebuild muscle where it was lost — regenerating structure, not implanting a device. Advancing in the lab, honestly not yet routine.
Restoring pumping function, not just cells Clinical / Frontier
The north star: success means the heart pumps better — measured as improved ejection fraction and capacity. Genuine functional recovery, achieved safely from the heart’s own biology, is the measure, and the link to heart-function restoration.
Cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers.
Government & programs
the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI, NIH), which funds cardiac-regeneration and heart-failure research (all mechanisms).
Cardiomyocyte-renewal researchers
Researchers who carbon-dated heart cells to prove the adult human heart renews its muscle (~0.5%/yr) and that cardiomyocytes can re-enter the cell cycle (mechanisms 2–3).
Direct-reprogramming researchers
Labs converting the heart’s own scar-forming fibroblasts directly into new muscle cells in place — regeneration from the body’s own cells (mechanism 4).
Cardiac-bioengineering researchers
Researchers growing engineered heart tissue from the body’s own cells to rebuild lost muscle (mechanism 5).
Enabling science
cardiomyocyte renewal and cell-cycle biology · direct fibroblast-to-myocyte reprogramming · cardiac tissue engineering · heart-failure physiology · functional cardiac imaging.
The technologies of safe myocardial regeneration center on the heart’s own biology: protecting surviving muscle (grounded today), awakening the heart’s own cell renewal, reawakening cardiomyocyte division, and converting the heart’s own scar cells into muscle — plus bioengineering tissue from the body’s own cells. Each rebuilds heart muscle from within — no harm — and we name the honest stage of each. The overturning of the “hearts can’t regenerate” dogma shows the direction is real.
The heart renews its own muscle Clinical / Frontier
Carbon-dating proved the adult human heart renews ~0.5% of its muscle cells per year — nearly 40% across a lifetime.
Heart cells can divide Frontier
The dogma that cardiomyocytes cannot divide has been overturned — existing heart cells can re-enter the cell cycle, the main engine of heart regeneration.
Scar can become muscle Frontier
The heart’s own scar-forming fibroblasts can be converted directly into new muscle cells in place — regeneration from the body’s own cells.
Tissue can be rebuilt Frontier
Engineered heart tissue grown from the body’s own cells aims to rebuild lost muscle — structure, not a device.
The goal is a stronger pump Clinical / Frontier
Success means improved pumping — higher ejection fraction and capacity, the honest measure of regeneration.
The honest challenges: myocardial regeneration is real but mostly frontier. The heart’s own renewal is proven, but it is slow, and safely amplifying it — and converting scar to muscle — in people is still being worked out, largely in laboratory and animal models. Protecting surviving muscle and blood supply remains the most powerful tool today. We never present lab promise as clinical reality. But the direction is a genuine reversal of century-old dogma: the heart can rebuild its own muscle, and the science of safely driving that is real and advancing.
The future, fully built
A future where lost heart muscle is safely regrown from the heart’s own biology: surviving muscle protected, the heart’s own renewal awakened, its muscle cells dividing again, its own scar converted back into muscle, and pumping function restored. A heart attack’s damage becomes something the heart can rebuild from within — with no new health problems and no harm.
The proof, for this capability
Cited as evidence the capability is real, not as partners or endorsers.
Adult cardiomyocyte renewalClinical / Frontier
Carbon-dating of human heart cells shows the adult heart renews ~0.5% of its muscle per year — nearly 40% across a lifetime.
Cardiomyocyte cell-cycle re-entryFrontier
The dogma that heart cells cannot divide has been overturned — heart regeneration proceeds mainly via existing cardiomyocytes re-entering the cell cycle.
Scar-to-muscle reprogrammingFrontier
The heart’s own scar-forming fibroblasts can be directly converted into new cardiomyocytes in place — regeneration from the body’s own cells.
Engineered heart tissueFrontier
Heart tissue grown from the body’s own cells aims to rebuild lost muscle — regenerating structure, not implanting a device.
Renewal is slow — honest limitFrontier
The heart’s natural renewal is real but slow; safely amplifying it and converting scar to muscle in people remains frontier.
Restored pumpingClinical / Frontier
Success is measured as improved ejection fraction and capacity — genuine functional recovery.
Honest framing
Real organizations and research findings are cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers. The Healthy capability is the safe regeneration of the heart’s own muscle, creating no new health problems. Where a step is frontier, we label it frontier.
Help build this future
Every signature grows the movement to make safe heart-muscle regeneration real — and free at the point of need.