Posted on 10/10/2008 12:44:43 AM PDT by neverdem
Artificial Bladder: John Carnett
Almost 100,000 people languish on organ-transplant waiting lists. But new tissue-fabrication techniques should make swapping in a man-made liver as easy as snapping Lego bricks into place.
Blood vessels Method: 3-D printer When: 5 years Gabor Forgacs, a tissue engineer at the University of Missouri, is making blood-vessel networks by culturing three types of vessel cells and loading them into a fridge-size bioprinter. This machine prints out the cells to build capillaries in preprogrammed patterns.
Liver Method: Grown using stem cells from umbilical-cord blood When: 1525 years Colin McGuckin has made silver-dollar-size, functional mini livers. They arent large enough to do a full bodys worth of work, because livers have hard-to-replicate ducts with specialized cells.
Kidney Method: Grown on a polymer framework When: 1020 years His artificial bladder breakthrough in 2006 grabbed all the headlines, but Anthony Atala of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine is forging ahead on other artificial organs. In 2002, when he transplanted artificial kidneys into cows, the organs survived for months and even produced their own urine, albeit not very efficiently. But to build one for humans, he has to figure out the precise combination of seeder cells that will transform a lab-built scaffold into a fully functioning, transplantable organ.
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Perfectly good human organs with a government ban on any compensation are certainly useless...
My wife needs a knee.
Seriously, this is great stuff, but it is going to be for the very rich and well connected. Society won’t be able to afford it for everyone.
Is this related to the e-mails that keep offering to add extra inches to my organ?
Just name-dropping. (Last paragraph of article)
:o)
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