Mark Boyett

Professor at Alliance Manchester Business School

Schools

  • Alliance Manchester Business School

Links

Biography

Alliance Manchester Business School

Overview

Mark Boyett is a teacher, scientist and research group leader. He has supervised 36 Ph.D. students and 43 fellows, of whom now 5 are Professors, 2 are Readers, 2 are Senior Lecturers, 10 are Lecturers, 1 is Assistant Professor and 1 is Associate Professor. 

Biography

Mark Boyett was born in Portsmouth in 1952 and his childhood was spent in England, Africa and Australia. At university, as an undergraduate student, he studied biological sciences and, as a postgraduate student, physiology. Following his Ph.D., Mark was a Royal Society Overseas Fellow at the University of Berne in Switzerland. In 1978 he was appointed a Lecturer in Physiology at the University of Leeds. He remained at the University of Leeds for 26 years and he was appointed a Reader in Physiology in 1991 and a Professor of Physiology in 1995. In 2005 he moved to the University of Manchester as the Professor of Cardiac Electrophysiology. Mark has published ~240 papers and other substantial contributions. His h factor is currently 49. He has held grants totalling ~15.5 million pounds, including four programme grants from the British Heart Foundation.

  • Mark has worked on the electrophysiology of the heart throughout his career. 
  • His principle work has been concerned with the ‘cardiac conduction system’, the electrical wiring system of the heart. This system comprises the sinus node, atrioventricular node and His-Purkinje system and it is responsible for the initiation and coordination of the heartbeat.
  • He has described the detailed anatomical structure of the system. Surprisingly, this was not known. For example, the pacemaker of the heart, the sinus node, is always shown in textbooks as a small nodule (not the case) in the wrong location! It is astonishing that generations of cardiac surgeons have been taught the wrong location of the sinus node. He has shown that the sinus node is much more extensive than originally thought – this explains why the heartbeat is first initiated at a range of sites in the right atrium. Another example: he has shown how the structure of the atrioventricular node can explain atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia, a relatively common arrhythmia in young adults.
  • The function of the cardiac conduction system is electrical and it depends on proteins called ‘ion channels’ and Mark has shown the pattern of expression of ~100 ion channels in the cardiac conduction system – it is characteristically different from that in the ordinary muscle of the heart.
  • The cardiac conduction system goes wrong in heart failure and this increases morbidity and mortality. For example, a quarter of heart failure patients have left bundle branch block. It is likely that the cardiac conduction system goes wrong in pulmonary hypertension, following myocardial infarction, and in diabetes and obesity as well. The cardiac conduction system even goes wrong in endurance athletes! Mark has shown that the cardiac conduction system disease is the result of widespread changes in the ion channels.
  • Mark has found nodal cells outside of the cardiac conduction system: in the atria and even the ventricles. In the ventricles, they are found at the root of the pulmonary artery and aorta. These nodal cells do not take part in the normal cardiac cycle. Instead they are probably responsible for a range of atrial tachycardias and the so-called ventricular outflow tract ventricular tachycardias.
  • Mark is producing computer models of the heart with accurate anatomy and accurate electrophysiology. These models are being used to simulate the normal cardiac cycle as well arrhythmias. These models are able to beat and one day pump blood (virtually). These models can be used in teaching, research and drug discovery and will reduce the need for animal experimentation. 

Read about executive education

Other experts

Gail Millin Chalabi

Overview Gail Millin-Chalabi is the GIS and Remote Sensing Officer for SEED, with research interests in the application of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) for burn scar detection in UK moorland environments. In addition her work is focused on the development of a business case proposing a Spatial ...

John Carr

Academic Division: ManagementMark is co-founder and managing partner of the South Street Strategy Group, a Boston-based consulting firm that combines the best in strategy consulting with the best in marketing science to help companies develop superior growth and innovation strategies. South Stree...

Debra Coleman Jeter Cpa

Subject Areas Accounting Biography A CPA with a distinguished record of professional achievement, Debra Jeter has earned numerous accolades for her teaching and research excellence. Awards & Accomplishments Professor Jeter''s many awards and honors include scholarships and fellowships from De...

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.