scholarly journals Trends in Tissue Engineering for Blood Vessels

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judee Grace Nemeno-Guanzon ◽  
Soojung Lee ◽  
Johan Robert Berg ◽  
Yong Hwa Jo ◽  
Jee Eun Yeo ◽  
...  

Over the years, cardiovascular diseases continue to increase and affect not only human health but also the economic stability worldwide. The advancement in tissue engineering is contributing a lot in dealing with this immediate need of alleviating human health. Blood vessel diseases are considered as major cardiovascular health problems. Although blood vessel transplantation is the most convenient treatment, it has been delimited due to scarcity of donors and the patient’s conditions. However, tissue-engineered blood vessels are promising alternatives as mode of treatment for blood vessel defects. The purpose of this paper is to show the importance of the advancement on biofabrication technology for treatment of soft tissue defects particularly for vascular tissues. This will also provide an overview and update on the current status of tissue reconstruction especially from autologous stem cells, scaffolds, and scaffold-free cellular transplantable constructs. The discussion of this paper will be focused on the historical view of cardiovascular tissue engineering and stem cell biology. The representative studies featured in this paper are limited within the last decade in order to trace the trend and evolution of techniques for blood vessel tissue engineering.

2007 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 1230-1241 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane M. Lewis ◽  
Earl Y. Cheng

Patients with spina bifida and a neurogenic bladder have traditionally been managed with clean intermittent catheterization and pharmacotherapy in order to treat abnormal bladder wall dynamics, protect the upper urinary tract from damage, and achieve urinary continence. However, some patients will fail this therapy and require surgical reconstruction in the form of bladder augmentation surgery using reconfigured intestine or stomach to increase the bladder capacity while reducing the internal storage pressure. Despite functional success of bladder augmentation in achieving a low pressure reservoir, there are several associated complications of this operation and patients do not have the ability to volitionally void. For these reasons, alternative treatments have been sought. Two exciting alternative approaches that are currently being investigated are tissue engineering and neuromodulation. Tissue engineering aims to create new bladder tissue for replacement purposes with both “seeded” and “unseeded” technology. Advances in the fields of nanotechnology and stem cell biology have further enhanced these tissue engineering technologies. Neuromodulation therapies directly address the root of the problem in patients with spina bifida and a neurogenic bladder, namely the abnormal relationship between the nerves and the bladder wall. These therapies include transurethral bladder electrostimulation, sacral neuromodulation, and neurosurgical techniques such as selective sacral rhizotomy and artificial somatic-autonomic reflex pathway construction. This review will discuss both tissue engineering techniques and neuromodulation therapies in more detail including rationale, experimental data, current status of clinical application, and future direction.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
William C. W. Chen ◽  
Bruno Péault ◽  
Johnny Huard

Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) represent a promising adult progenitor cell source for tissue repair and regeneration. Their mysterious identityin situhas gradually been unveiled by the accumulating evidence indicating an association between adult multipotent stem/progenitor cells and vascular/perivascular niches. Using immunohistochemistry and fluorescence-activated cell sorting, we and other groups have prospectively identified and purified subpopulations of multipotent precursor cells associated with the blood vessels within multiple human organs. The three precursor subsets, myogenic endothelial cells (MECs), pericytes (PCs), and adventitial cells (ACs), are located, respectively, in the three structural tiers of typical blood vessels: intima, media, and adventitia. MECs, PCs, and ACs have been extensively characterized in prior studies and are currently under investigation for their therapeutic potentials in preclinical animal models. In this review, we will briefly discuss the identification, isolation, and characterization of these human blood-vessel-derived stem cells (hBVSCs) and summarize the current status of regenerative applications of hBVSC subsets.


2008 ◽  
Vol 87 (12) ◽  
pp. 1138-1143 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Nait Lechguer ◽  
S. Kuchler-Bopp ◽  
B. Hu ◽  
Y. Haïkel ◽  
H. Lesot

The implantation of cultured dental cell-cell re-associations allows for the reproduction of fully formed teeth, crown morphogenesis, epithelial histogenesis, mineralized dentin and enamel deposition, and root-periodontium development. Since vascularization is critical for organogenesis and tissue engineering, this work aimed to study: (a) blood vessel formation during tooth development, (b) the fate of blood vessels in cultured teeth and re-associations, and (c) vascularization after in vivo implantation. Ex vivo, blood vessels developed in the dental mesenchyme from the cap to bell stages and in the enamel organ, shortly before ameloblast differentiation. In cultured teeth and re-associations, blood-vessel-like structures remained in the peridental mesenchyme, but never developed into dental tissues. After implantation, both teeth and re-associations became revascularized, although later in the case of the re-associations. In implanted re-associations, newly formed blood vessels originated from the host, allowing for their survival, and affording conditions organ growth, mineralization, and enamel secretion.


2018 ◽  
Vol 68 (5) ◽  
pp. 243-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mehmet Onur Aydogdu ◽  
Joshua Chou ◽  
Esra Altun ◽  
Nazmi Ekren ◽  
Selami Cakmak ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 362 (1484) ◽  
pp. 1343-1356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Puspa Batten ◽  
Nadia A Rosenthal ◽  
Magdi H Yacoub

Although recent progress in cardiovascular tissue engineering has generated great expectations for the exploitation of stem cells to restore cardiac form and function, the prospects of a common mass-produced cell resource for clinically viable engineered tissues and organs remain problematic. The refinement of stem cell culture protocols to increase induction of the cardiomyocyte phenotype and the assembly of transplantable vascularized tissue are areas of intense current research, but the problem of immune rejection of heterologous cell type poses perhaps the most significant hurdle to overcome. This article focuses on the potential advantages and problems encountered with various stem cell sources for reconstruction of the damaged or failing myocardium or heart valves and also discusses the need for integrating advances in developmental and stem cell biology, immunology and tissue engineering to achieve the full potential of cardiac tissue engineering. The ultimate goal is to produce ‘off-the-shelf’ cells and tissues capable of inducing specific immune tolerance.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahad M. Siddiqui ◽  
David Oswald ◽  
Sophia Papamichalopoulos ◽  
Domnhall Kelly ◽  
Priska Summer ◽  
...  

AbstractPositively charged oligo-polyethylene glycol fumarate (OPF+) hydrogel scaffolds, implanted into a complete transection spinal cord injury (SCI), facilitate a permissive regenerative environment and provide a platform for controlled observation of repair mechanisms. Axonal regeneration after SCI is critically dependent upon the availability of nutrients and oxygen from a newly formed blood supply. In this study, the objective was to investigate fundamental characteristics of revascularization in association with the ingrowth of axons into hydrogel scaffolds, and to define the spatial relationships between axons and the neovasculature. A novel combination of stereologic estimates and precision image analysis techniques are described to quantitate neurovascular regeneration in rats. Multichannel hydrogel scaffolds containing Matrigel-only (MG), Schwann cells (SCs), or SCs with rapamycin-eluting poly(lactic co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) microspheres (RAPA) were implanted for 6 weeks following complete spinal cord transection. Image analysis of 72 scaffold channels identified a total of 2,494 myelinated and 4,173 unmyelinated axons at 10 micron circumferential intervals centered around 708 individual blood vessel profiles. Blood vessel number, density, volume, diameter, inter-vessel distances, total vessel surface and cross-sectional areas, and radial diffusion distances in each group were measured. Axon number and density, blood vessel surface area, and vessel cross-sectional areas in the SC group exceeded that in the MG and RAPA groups. Axons were concentrated within a concentric radius of 200-250 microns from the blood vessel wall in Gaussian distributions which identified a peak axonal number (mean peak amplitude) corresponding to defined distances (mean peak distance) from each vessel. Axons were largely excluded from a 25 micron zone immediately adjacent to the vessel. Higher axonal densities correlated with smaller vessel cross-sectional areas. A statistical spatial algorithm was used to generate cumulative distribution F- and G-functions of axonal distribution in the reference channel space. Axons located around blood vessels were definitively organized as clusters and were not randomly distributed. By providing methods to quantify the axonal-vessel relationships, these results may refine spinal cord tissue engineering strategies to optimize the regeneration of complete neurovascular bundles in their relevant spatial relationships after SCI.Impact StatementVascular disruption and impaired neovascularization contribute critically to the poor regenerative capacity of the spinal cord after injury. In this study, hydrogel scaffolds provide a detailed model system to investigate the regeneration of spinal cord axons as they directly associate with individual blood vessels, using novel methods to define their spatial relationships and the physiologic implications of that organization. These results refine future tissue-engineering strategies for spinal cord repair to optimize the re-development of complete neurovascular bundles in their relevant spatial architectures.


2007 ◽  
Vol 55 (S 1) ◽  
Author(s):  
D Schmidt ◽  
C Breymann ◽  
J Achermann ◽  
B Odermatt ◽  
M Genoni ◽  
...  

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