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The Future of Regenerative Medicine

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samrtconsulting
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Topic Started by samrtconsulting
on 6/30/2010 9:09 AM   
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 Bioengineering, and more specifically, tissue engineering, gives a new perspective to personalized medicine.

 

The use of cells and therapies has become a strong practice to get the body to heal itself, as it already happens with blood transfusions, bone marrow transplants, and autologous chondrocyte implantation to re-grow cartilage.

 

These procedures have prepared the road for over 2000 clinical trials linked to cell therapies, like stem cells for ischemic heart regions, neural precursor cells for Parkinson’s disease, and oligodendrocytes resulting from embryonic stem cells to heal spinal cord injuries.

 

The key to success is to detect the best mechanism to transfer these cells.  For example, cell-based therapy is employed to treat osteoarthritis of the knee, where the damage to cartilage and the subchondral bone produces less fibro cartilage repair than the mechanical properties of articular cartilage.  The majority of patients develop an acute degenerative joint disease, and over 250,000 knee replacements are done in a year.  In this case, injecting a suspension of autologous cultured chondrocytes into the problem area won’t work effectively because the cells have the tendency of forming fibro cartilage and of losing their round shape.  The best way to treat osteoarthritis of the knee is to embed the chondrocytes in the cartilaginous matrix that wears away just as the cartilage does.  

 

If the chondrocytes are enveloped in gels, this permits the cells to maintain their rounded shape, and the properties of the gels can be controlled to let the tissue regenerate.  The mesh has to be small enough to hold up the cells, and open enough to get water and nutrients.  Equally, the gel structure has to disintegrate at the right rate so that the extracellular matrix that is secreted is not limited only to the area that surrounds each chondrocyte.

 

The cartilage tissue that is engineered can replicate the structural characteristics of native cartilage to such an extent that the cell orientation and the regenerated cartilage look like native cartilage.  The cells that are enveloped in this kind of matrix can migrate to and from the cartilage at the surface.

 

A vital matter brought up by cell-based therapy is how to make the most of the utility of cells delivered to an environment that is passive or tolerant, where there is context for the kind of cell required but in which very few biological signals are produced to support normal cell function. 

 

In the end, bioengineers picture a material system in which the embedded cells emit a signal so that deeper cells form bone white cells close to the surface form cartilage.

 

Regenerative medicine anticipates several things:

 

-       A rising impact of cell-based therapies in clinical medicine

 

-       Methods that make it easy to regenerate skin, bone, cartilage, bladder, and trachea from bone marrow stem cells, and also the regeneration of blood vessels and heart valves

 

-       The restoration of function in complex tissues like the spinal cord

 

-       Going after the goal of regenerating more complex tissues and neo-organs

 

-       Tackling big challenges, like the identification of cell sources and clinically relevant cell numbers, the integration of new cells into existing tissue matrices, and the accomplishment of functional properties of tissue equivalents using expanded range of biomaterials 

 

Contact your life sciences consulting group for more information and guidance on how to make the most of the regenerative medicine market.

 

 

If you liked this article, tell all your friends about it. They’ll thank you for it. If you have a blog or website, you can link to it or even post it to your own site (don’t forget to mention www.smartconsultinggroup.com as the original source).

 

Nigel Smart
Nigel Smart is a pharmaceutical consultant and founder of the pharmaceutical consulting blog.


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Carson O Genic
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Posted By Carson O Genic
on 6/30/2010 16:20 PM   
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 Moved post to Stem Cell Biology since I think this is a more appropriate forum.



andy123
United Kingdom

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Posted By andy123
on 9/21/2010 3:16 AM   
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Great thread to explore. As I am a newbie I would be very thankful with these type of threads.
Thanks.



Carson O Genic
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Posted By Carson O Genic
on 9/21/2010 23:38 PM   
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 Welcome to Scientist Solutions, please feel free to post your question, comments and opinions!



Dominiquest
India

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Posted By Dominiquest
on 9/22/2010 1:15 AM   
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Hi! I am working on a small project that involves regenerative therapy for two main medical conditions as Diabetes and Parkinson's Disease, using the same principle to treat both the conditions. When you look at stem cell research, you use the ovum of one individual and you implant the nucleus of another individual and then an electrical impulse is applied in order to activate the cell functioning. The information I require is the intensity and strength of the impulse that is applied to the cell in order to reach beyond its threshold energy for normal functioning. Thanks. Dominique. (dominique_hoover@yahoo.co.in)

Dominique Frances Hoover



Carson O Genic
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Posted By Carson O Genic
on 9/22/2010 5:43 AM   
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I have no experience with nuclear transfer, but I'm guessing this is one of those factors that has to be fine tuned for each individual application.

May I suggest you repost your question as a new thread within the Stem Cell Biology forum so that you may attract other readers.  You question may get lost in this thread. It may also help if you list the species your working with.



WuZenTech
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Posted By WuZenTech
on 11/22/2010 10:43 AM   
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Thanks for your posting. I thought you and the people you interact may be interested in the Tissue Engineering Robot (available in 96well format), which will help advance the field of Regenertive Medicine. It is also a tool used for generating human tissue models for the evaluation of drug efficacy and toxicity in the pharma/biotech fields.

A video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43nkvfvBx5k

Please contact: wuzentech@gmail.com



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