Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10051512 | The Journal of Urology | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The addition of aerosolized cells of urological origin is a viable augmentation approach that appears to achieve the much sought after inhibition of intrinsic fibrosis and contraction of colonic segments when incorporated into the urinary tract without this cellular component. Moreover, this technique appears to provide a histologically normal, confluent urothelium, which sets the stage for prevention of the well-documented biochemical aberrations inherent in augments containing gastrointestinal epithelium. While successful in this model regardless of the incorporation of urological smooth muscle cells, chronic studies are now warranted to validate the short-term results as well as determine whether the urological mesenchymal population (smooth muscle) will be required to sustain the uroepithelial phenotype in the long term.
Keywords
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Authors
ASHRAF T. HAFEZ, KOUROSH AFSHAR, DARIUS J. BÃGLI, ANDRE BAHORIC, KAREN AITKEN, CHARLES R. SMITH, ANTOINE E. KHOURY,