However: the number of muscles cells in our hearts is naturally not going to stay the same throughout our lifetimes. Through injury or aging, heart muscle cells can die. Because they are not able to replenish themselves through proliferation our body has to replace them with cells that can proliferate. These cells are usually Fibroblasts, our bodies key cells to repair injuries. Fibroblasts however do not contract, which in turn reduces the hearts ability to contract and pump blood.
Induced pluripotent stem cells can offer an incredible opportunity regarding this issue. Heart muscle cells do not divide anymore, but pluripotent stem cells can (its kind of what they do, besides differentiating). Through the process of inducing stem cells from easily available cells (like skin fibroblasts), stem cells can be produced in virtually endless numbers, and by differentiating them into heart cells we can circumvent the inability of heart cells to divide, by creating them in the lab.
I know you might be inclined to say, that some cells in the lab are not close to your heart (in an absolutely literal sense). Here is where some exciting, but so far mostly experimental, biomedical engineering comes into play. These cells can be used to make a heart “patch”. By growing lab made heart muscles cells into engineered heart tissues, heart injuries could quite literally be patched up. To better visualize this you can see one of these heart patches placed on an injured guinea pig heart on the right. All of this is of course still very much in its infancy and not to be used widespread in the clinic soon. But who knows, maybe in the future the liver will not be the only organ to grow back.