2012 Heath Care Heroes Team

Joint Commission Seal

Children's Board Hillsborough County

Emergency Prepardness
Telephone
813.239.8561

Employee Email

Ask Joe

 

 


powered by centersite dot net
Health Sciences
Resources
Basic InformationMore InformationLatest News
Got an Itch? Mouse Study May Help Explain WhyStimulant Normalizes Brain Activation in Youth With ADHDDocs Use 3-D Printer to Create Lifesaving Airway Device for InfantChildren Who Have CT Scans May Face Higher Cancer RiskCellphone Use May Reveal Your 'Dominant Brain'Test Approved to Detect Faulty Lung Cancer GeneScientists Use Cloning Technique to Produce Human Stem CellsCognitive Health Info From Doctors Found to Be LackingDaily Gene Rhythms May Be Off in Depressed PeopleGene Discovery May Offer Breakthrough for Rare LeukemiaEating Peppers Tied to Lower Parkinson's Risk, Study FindsRed Hair Pigment Might Raise Melanoma Risk: StudyMuhammad Ali's Daughter Champions Fight Against Parkinson's DiseaseBipolar Disorder Drugs May 'Tweak' Genes Affecting BrainGene Studies Could Point to New Alzheimer's Treatments'Off-the-Shelf' Artificial Blood Vessels Show PromiseU.S. Shortfall in Neurologists Expected to Get WorseBrain Stimulation Reduces Smoking CravingsShrinkage of Brain Region May Signal Onset of Multiple SclerosisGenetics Linked to Abnormal Alzheimer's MarkersVascular Markers Linked to Cognitive Decline in DiabetesScientists May Have Spotted Brain's 'Numbers Center'Brain Changes Seen in Relatives of People With Alzheimer'sAerobic Exercise Reduces Brain Damage From Alcohol10 Years On, Still Much To Be Learned From Human Genome MapStem Cells to Relieve Low Back Pain?Study Links Stillbirth to Genes Tied to Dangerous Heart RhythmWeight-Loss Surgery May Affect Fat-Related GenesFor First Time, Pain 'Signature' Spotted on Brain MRIs'Transparent' Mouse Brain Could Shed Light on Human Brain HealthGene May Double Risk of Alzheimer's in BlacksStudy Locates More Obesity GenesScans May Reveal Pre-Schizophrenia Brain ChangesObama Administration Unveils The BRAIN InitiativeBrain Differences Seen in People With MigrainesBrain Changes Could Contribute to Gulf War Illness: StudyGenetics May Be Tied to Breast Cancer Risk in Unexpected WaysTelemedicine Is Useful for Parkinson's Disease PatientsAAN: Three New Treatments Show Promise for Parkinson'sCirculating Tumor DNA Is Key Clue to Breast Cancer SpreadNew Drugs May Offer Hope to Parkinson's PatientsScientists ID Antibody That Might Boost Cancer TherapyProcedure Lowers 'Hunger Hormone' to Help Obese Lose WeightBrain 'Pacemaker' May Help Ease Tough-to-Treat AnorexiaBrain Scans May Explain Thinking, Memory Problems in Some MS PatientsEye-Tracking Tool Might Quickly Spot StrokeSNPs Confer Risk for Multiple Psychiatric DisordersShared Genes May Link ADHD, Autism and DepressionGene Disorder Screen Benefits Baby Boys, Girls Equally: StudyAAN Issues Top Five Choosing Wisely Recommendations
Links
Related Topics

Medical Disorders
Mental Disorders
Mental Health Professions

Lab-Grown Blood Vessels May Improve Heart Bypass

HealthDay News
by By Denise MannHealthDay Reporter
Updated: Jul 25th 2012

 

new article illustration

WEDNESDAY, July 25 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers have grown small blood vessels in a lab using stem cells from fat gathered through liposuction. Such cultured blood vessels might someday play a role in transplant operations, including heart bypass surgery.

In bypass surgery, transplanted blood vessels are used to reroute blood around severely blocked arteries. Current techniques have limitations, however, and these preliminary study results suggest that tissue-engineered blood vessels might help doctors surmount certain hurdles, the researchers said.

Many more steps are involved before heart surgery patients can benefit from this technique, said study author Dr. Matthias Nollert, an associate professor at the University of Oklahoma School of Chemical, Biological and Materials Engineering, in Norman, Okla.

"First, we will need to make a fully functional vessel. Ours works, but does not yet achieve physiological mechanical properties," he said. "[Then] we will need to show that stem cells obtained from old, sick people can also be used to make a functional vessel and that this works in an animal model."

All in all, "we are still five to 10 years away from seeing this being tested in people," Nollert said. But the researchers hope to have a prototype ready for animal testing by early next year.

Ultimately, millions of patients with cardiovascular disease could benefit, the researchers said.

"We are targeting elderly, obese or diabetic patients in need of coronary artery bypass graft surgery," Nollert said. "For these patients, the gold standard is a vascular graft, but for many there are no suitable vessels available."

The findings are scheduled for presentation Wednesday at an American Heart Association meeting in New Orleans. Data and conclusions presented at medical meetings should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

For the study, researchers using liposuction extracted adult stem cells from fat and turned them into smooth muscle cells. Adult stem cells are considered to be undifferentiated, which means they hold the potential to morph into specialized cell types. Liposuction is a common cosmetic surgery procedure in which doctors use a small needle to remove excess fat from under the skin by suction.

The extracted cells were "seeded" onto a very thin collagen membrane. As they multiplied, researchers rolled them into tubes with the diameter of small blood vessels (3 millimeters). In three to four weeks, they were able to grow usable blood vessels.

Such lab-grown vessels with "off-the-shelf availability" could overcome problems associated with grafting blood vessels from the patient's body or from using artificial blood vessels, the researchers believe.

Many bypass patients are readmitted to the hospital because of complications from surgery, and about 40 percent of these readmissions are caused by problems at the donor site, not the heart artery, Nollert said.

"By developing a tissue-engineered vessel using the patient's own cells, we would eliminate the need to use a donor vessel," he said.

Current small-vessel grafts also carry an inherent risk of clotting, rejection or failure to function normally, he added.

Other experts agree that engineered blood vessels could fill a need for patients with cardiovascular disease.

"It is very hard to bypass small vessels in the heart," said Dr. Roberto Bolli, an American Heart Association spokesman and chief of cardiology at the University of Louisville in Kentucky. "If these cells prove useful, it will be very easy to collect through liposuction."

One potential downside is that these blood vessels take time to grow in the lab. "They would not be available immediately, but you could bank your own cells and keep them until the time comes that you need them," Bolli added.

Dr. Stephen Green, chief of cardiology at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, N.Y., is cautiously optimistic about the implications of the new findings.

"It's a big deal and a potentially game-changing thing," he said. "But this is a first step, and we are far removed from Mrs. Jones having bypass [surgery] with a lab-grown blood vessel."

The need for the small-diameter blood vessels is tremendous, Green said. Many bypass patients don't have veins to use. "You can run out of appropriate veins," he said, "especially if this is a repeat operation."

More information

The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute has more about coronary artery bypass grafting.