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Bioengineering Stem Cell

Fat Engineered into Blood Vessels

11 years, 7 months ago

8326  0
Posted on Aug 29, 2012, 6 a.m.

Adult stem cells extracted from one's own fat tissue, then cultured into sheets, and rolled into tiny vessels performed as well as natural blood vessels on elastic contractility.

Liposuction can provide the raw materials for growing new small-diameter blood vessels in the lab, reports a team from the University of Oklahoma (Oklahoma, USA),  Matthias Nollert extracted adult stem cells extracted from patients’ own fat tissue, then cultured them into sheets, and rolled them into tiny vessels: these engineered blood vessels performed as well as natural ones on elastic contractility, but  still need some work to withstand as much pressure as a native vessel can take without bursting.  If the proof-of-concept results with the liposuction-derived stem cells are durable in vivo, it could be an easier route to engineered vessels than the painful bone-marrow procedure for the typically older, sicker heart disease population.

Brennan JA, et al. "Development of a human tissue-engineered blood vessel from adipose-derived stem cells" [Abstract 360].  Presented at American Heart Association Basic Cardiovascular Sciences, 25 July 2012. 

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