Posted on 07/01/2010 10:49:44 PM PDT by neverdem
For the first time, an animal has drawn a breath with lungs cultivated in the lab. Although preliminary, the results might eventually lead to replacement lungs for patients.
People whose lungs are failing because of diseases such as emphysema or cystic fibrosis face a grim outlook. Only 10% to 20% of patients who undergo lung transplants survive for 10 years, versus about 50% for heart recipients. Research to create new lungs in the lab has lagged because of their complex structure and multiple cell types, notes biomedical engineer Laura Niklason of Yale University.
Tissue engineers are enthusiastic about a technique called decellularization that involves using detergent to remove all of the cells from an organ, leaving a scaffold consisting of the fibrous material between cells. The material serves as a template for fresh cells, orchestrating their assembly and growth into a new organ. The technique has yielded implantable liver grafts for rats. And in 2008, a 30-year-old woman received a replacement for one of the lung's main air passages, which scientists had seeded with her own cells.
Now Niklason and colleagues say they have used the method to produce rodent lungs. The team started with decellularized adult rat lungs, which retain the organs' branching airways and blood vessel network, and added a mixture of lung cells from newborn rats. Niklason says that the crucial step was nurturing the would-be lungs in a bioreactor that circulates fluidsimulating what would happen during fetal developmentor air through them. The cells stuck to the scaffold in the right locations and multiplied. After up to 8 days in the bioreactor, they had coalesced into what the researchers' tests indicated was functional lung tissue.
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To determine whether the new organs worked, the researchers removed rats' left lungs and stitched in lab-grown replacements. X-rays showed that the implanted lungs were inflating, though not fully. Tests of gas levels in blood flowing to and from the replacement organs showed that they were taking in oxygen and releasing carbon dioxide at 95% of normal efficiency. The researchers allowed the animals to breathe with the lungs for up to 2 hours before euthanizing them because of blood clots.
"We've shown that it's possible to engineer a lung that can perform the single most important functionexchange of gases," says Niklason, whose team reports its findings online today in Science. She describes the results as one advance in a "20- to 25-year project" and cautions that a huge obstacle lies ahead. Researchers need to identify cellspossibly adult stem cells from the patientthat can reconstruct lung tissue without provoking attack by the immune system, the problem that plagues current transplant recipients.
Tissue engineer Joan Nichols of the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston praises most of the study. "It started out beautifully, it was so well done." However, she argues that the organs were implanted prematurely. The bleeding the researchers detected within the lungs suggests that the organs weren't ready, she says. Nichols recommends a much longer growth periodsay, 60 daysand further testing to make sure the lungs are sound. "The answer is not just to implant and see if it works," she says.
Heaven forfend! You can't let the immunology cat out of the bag!
There's a cool video at the source, if I can't copy a working version from copying the the source code. That's what usually happens.
regenerative medicine/stem cell ping
Is this the extra-cellular matrix research they’ve been doing?
I know that they have been able to re-grow new bladders for people with bladder cancer. Another guy chopped off his finger in an industrial accident and they re-grew his finger!
Amazing.
And then along comes Obama healthcare to cripple medical advancement...
We’re just a generation or two too early, as it will be too late for us. I suspect that eventually that these medical folks will have us living for about as long as we want to.
It will be a historical revolution of sorts. People in the future will look back at the times we are in now when people still died from sickness and disease in the same way that we look back at people dying from smallpox, or other ailments we have ‘defeated’.
The limiting factor for us will be that the Earth is only big enough for just so many people, and I’m sure we’ll continue to excel at killing one another when conflicts break out.
Absolutely. The Dims always acted like Bush was standing in the way of medical progress, but it turns out they were only projecting.
Jeez, Democrats can’t even take a breath without someone providing the necessary equipment?
lab grown lungs for Rats?
let me know when the lab grows spines for Pubs...
“Rats Breathe With Lab-Grown Lungs”
And....................
Demorats think with Obama programmed brains!
I’m hoping for Islet cell transplants soon for my kid.
These folks are all getting very close.
I wish somebody would push for organ replacements with the same energy that was used to put men on the moon.
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