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Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering: Where We Come From and Where Are We Now?

Tissue engineering was introduced by Vacanti and Langer in the 80’s, exploring the potential of this new technology starting with the well-known “human ear on the mouse back”. The goal is to create a substitute which supplies an individual therapy for patients with regeneration, remodeling and growt...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Smit, Francis E., Dohmen, Pascal M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4316861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25623227
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSMBR.893546
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author Smit, Francis E.
Dohmen, Pascal M.
author_facet Smit, Francis E.
Dohmen, Pascal M.
author_sort Smit, Francis E.
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description Tissue engineering was introduced by Vacanti and Langer in the 80’s, exploring the potential of this new technology starting with the well-known “human ear on the mouse back”. The goal is to create a substitute which supplies an individual therapy for patients with regeneration, remodeling and growth potential. The growth potential of these subjects is of special interest in congenital cardiac surgery, avoiding repeated interventions and surgery. Initial applications of tissue engineered created substitutes were relatively simple cardiovascular grafts seeded initially by end-differentiated autologous endothelial cells. Important data were collected from these initial clinical autologous endothelial cell seeded grafts in peripheral and coronary vessel disease. After these initial successfully implantation bone marrow cell were used to seed patches and pulmonary conduits were implanted in patients. Driven by the positive results of tissue engineered material implanted under low pressure circumstances, first tissue engineered patches were implanted in the systemic circulation followed by the implantation of tissue engineered aortic heart valves. Tissue engineering is an extreme dynamic technology with continuously modifications and improvements to optimize clinical products. New technologies are unified and so this has also be done with tissue engineering and new application features, so called transcatheter valve intervention. First studies are initiated to apply tissue engineered heart valves with this new transcatheter delivery system less invasive. Simultaneously studies have been started on tissue engineering of so-called whole organs since organ transplantation is restricted due to donor shortage and tissue engineering could overcome this problem. Initial studies of whole heart engineering in the rat model are promising and larger size models are initiated.
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spelling pubmed-43168612015-02-05 Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering: Where We Come From and Where Are We Now? Smit, Francis E. Dohmen, Pascal M. Med Sci Monit Basic Res Review Articles Tissue engineering was introduced by Vacanti and Langer in the 80’s, exploring the potential of this new technology starting with the well-known “human ear on the mouse back”. The goal is to create a substitute which supplies an individual therapy for patients with regeneration, remodeling and growth potential. The growth potential of these subjects is of special interest in congenital cardiac surgery, avoiding repeated interventions and surgery. Initial applications of tissue engineered created substitutes were relatively simple cardiovascular grafts seeded initially by end-differentiated autologous endothelial cells. Important data were collected from these initial clinical autologous endothelial cell seeded grafts in peripheral and coronary vessel disease. After these initial successfully implantation bone marrow cell were used to seed patches and pulmonary conduits were implanted in patients. Driven by the positive results of tissue engineered material implanted under low pressure circumstances, first tissue engineered patches were implanted in the systemic circulation followed by the implantation of tissue engineered aortic heart valves. Tissue engineering is an extreme dynamic technology with continuously modifications and improvements to optimize clinical products. New technologies are unified and so this has also be done with tissue engineering and new application features, so called transcatheter valve intervention. First studies are initiated to apply tissue engineered heart valves with this new transcatheter delivery system less invasive. Simultaneously studies have been started on tissue engineering of so-called whole organs since organ transplantation is restricted due to donor shortage and tissue engineering could overcome this problem. Initial studies of whole heart engineering in the rat model are promising and larger size models are initiated. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2015-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4316861/ /pubmed/25623227 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSMBR.893546 Text en © Med Sci Monit, 2015 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License
spellingShingle Review Articles
Smit, Francis E.
Dohmen, Pascal M.
Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering: Where We Come From and Where Are We Now?
title Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering: Where We Come From and Where Are We Now?
title_full Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering: Where We Come From and Where Are We Now?
title_fullStr Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering: Where We Come From and Where Are We Now?
title_full_unstemmed Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering: Where We Come From and Where Are We Now?
title_short Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering: Where We Come From and Where Are We Now?
title_sort cardiovascular tissue engineering: where we come from and where are we now?
topic Review Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4316861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25623227
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSMBR.893546
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