Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
16231 Current Opinion in Biotechnology 2009 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The definitive treatment for end-stage heart failure, organ transplant, is limited by the supply of donor organs. Successful allograft recipients suffer significant adverse effects from chronic antirejection medications. Positive clinical treatment of injured myocardium with stem/progenitor cells has led to hope that one day autologous stem-cell-derived whole or partial donor organs can be generated. Advances in the ability to isolate (or generate) stem or progenitor cells that can give rise to beating cardiocyte-like cells and vascular components, and the advent of human iPS cell technology when combined with recent advances in the generation of perfusable complex tissue scaffolds has moved the field closer to creation of a transplantable heart. As cardiac tissue engineering matures, several other simpler cardiac tissues, such as patches for focal use and human cell test beds for drug screening and drug discovery, are emerging.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Bioengineering
Authors
,