Sign In
Ask Question
Nellie
English
28 January, 07:19
Will We Ever Grow Organs? module
+4
Answers (
1
)
Jair Sweeney
28 January, 07:48
0
In June 2011, an Eritrean man entered an operating theatre with a cancer-ridden windpipe, but left with a brand new one. People had received windpipe transplants before, but Andemariam Teklesenbet Beyene’s was different. His was the first organ of its kind to be completely grown in a lab using the patient’s own cells.
Beyene’s windpipe is one of the latest successes in the ongoing quest to grow artificial organs in a lab. The goal is deceptively simple: build bespoke organs for individual patients by sculpting them from living flesh on demand. No-one will have to wait on lengthy transplant lists for donor organs and no-one will have to take powerful and debilitating drugs to prevent their immune systems from rejecting new body parts.
The practicalities are, as you can imagine, less straightforward. Take the example I have already described. The process began with researchers taking 3D scans of Beyene’s windpipe, and from these scans Alexander Seifalian at University College London built an exact replica from a special polymer and a glass mould. This was flown to Sweden, where surgeon Paolo Macchiarini seeded this scaffold with stem cells taken from Beyene’s bone marrow. These stem cells, which can develop into every type of cell in the body, soaked into the structure and slowly recreated the man’s own tissues. The team at Stockholm’s Karolinska University Hospital incubated the growing windpipe in a bioreactor - a vat designed to mimic the conditions inside the human body.
Two days later, Macchiarini transplanted the windpipe during a 12-hour operation, and after a month, Beyene was discharged from the hospital, cancer-free. A few months later, the team repeated the trick with another cancer patient, an American man called Christopher Lyles.
Macchiarini’s success shows how far we have advanced towards the goal of bespoke organs. But even researchers at the cutting edge of this area admit that decades of research lie ahead to overcome all obstacles.
"A good way to think about it is that there are four levels of complexity," says Anthony Atala from the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, one of the leaders of the field. The first level includes flat organs like skin, which comprise just a few types of cells. Next up are tubes, like windpipes or blood vessels, with slightly more complex shapes and more varied collections of cells. The third level includes hollow sac-like organs, like the bladder or stomach. Unlike the tubes, which just act as pipes for fluid, these organs have to perform on demand - secreting, expanding or filtering as the situation arises.
Comment
Complaint
Link
Know the Answer?
Answer
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍
“Will We Ever Grow Organs? module ...”
in 📗 English if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers
You Might be Interested in
Which sentence has a conditional verb mood? A) If you score another touchdown, your team will win. B) At last week's football game, you scored two touchdowns! C) I wondered if you scored a touchdown at the football game.
Answers (1)
On which continent is ga
Answers (1)
What are 8 words that I can make from the letters in the word spider?
Answers (2)
Read the stanza from Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18." Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate: Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, And summer's lease hath all too short a date: What is the purpose of these
Answers (1)
Which sentence demonstrates correct use of modifiers? A. Rocco gave snacks to his friends in plastic bags. B. Standing on a chair, I was just able to reach the high window. C. Startled by the noise, the alarm clock was knocked on the floor. D.
Answers (2)
New Questions in English
How might citizens most likely react to their country's imperialist activities during the age of discovery?
Answers (2)
Can any one give the character sketch for tolman from one thousand dollars
Answers (1)
Imagine you are attending a rally for women's rights in 1851. You are told that the speaker is a woman named Sojourner Truth. What message does Sojourner Truth's name alone convey? Check the two boxes that apply.
Answers (2)
Which of the following areas is not emphasized in STEM? A. Mathematics. B. Science. C. Social Studies. D. Technology.
Answers (1)
What views about Raymond's run what's important do most of the stories and poems in this unit share? How do the selections differ in their views of what's important?
Answers (1)
Home
»
English
» Will We Ever Grow Organs? module
Sign In
Sign Up
Forgot Password?