Jayran Khodadad Presented Poster: AI-Guided Modeling of Low-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Effects on Arterial Thrombosis
Jayran Khodadad, Master’s degree, Bioengineering and Biomedical Engineering at Institut Polytechnique de Paris, shared a post on LinkedIn:
“At the E4H Annual Forum, I had the opportunity to present my poster titled “AI-Guided Modeling of Low-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Effects on Arterial Thrombosis”, a project I previously developed under the supervision of Dr. Afsaneh Mojra. The work explores how low-intensity focused ultrasound may influence mass-transfer behaviour inside a clot, and it also uses machine-learning models to predict concentration patterns that could support future ideas in drug-delivery and targeted therapeutic strategies.
The event was incredibly inspiring. I gained a lot of insight, got to know many of the exciting projects currently ongoing in the community, and really enjoyed hearing about new research directions during the presentations. I also appreciated the thoughtful comments and ideas that several people shared about my work, which gave me new perspectives to consider moving forward.
Many thanks to Engineering for Health (E4H) for organizing such a meaningful event and bringing the community together.”

Stay informed with Hemostasis Today.
-
Nov 29, 2025, 17:37Almahdi Ali Explores Ipsilateral Paradoxical Thromboembolism at 22nd European Angiology Days 2025
-
Nov 29, 2025, 17:23Jack Shuang Hou Shares Major Neurology Updates This Week
-
Nov 29, 2025, 16:52Federica Fogacci on Further Strengthening Collaboration Within the Lp(a)CCELERATE Study
-
Nov 29, 2025, 16:42Dr Abdul Mannan on the Echinocyte: Mastering the Diagnostic Duality of Artifact vs. Pathology
-
Nov 29, 2025, 16:42Vikas Dua: Heme Next 1.0 A Conference with a Difference
-
Nov 29, 2025, 16:41Hind Ali: Sources Of Error in Cell Counts
-
Nov 29, 2025, 16:40Maxime Dely: Even on a Break, You Can Give
-
Nov 29, 2025, 16:39Shrinidhi Nathany: HemeNext Brings Science, Technology, and Leadership Together
-
Nov 29, 2025, 16:38PF4 Antibody Persistence and Long-term Pathogenicity in VITT
