NationStates Jolt Archive


Growing Human Hearts

Londim
02-04-2007, 18:50
Grown Heart (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6517645.stm)

British scientists have grown part of a human heart from stem cells for the first time.
Heart surgeon Sir Magdi Yacoub, who led the team, said doctors could be using artificially grown heart components in transplants within three years.

His researchers at Harefield hospital managed to grow tissue that works in the same way as human heart valves.

Sir Magdi told the Guardian newspaper a whole heart could be produced from stem cells within 10 years.

'Common pathway'

The team which spent 10 years working on the project included physicists, pharmacologists, clinicians and cellular scientists.

Researchers will see their achievement as a major step towards growing entire organs for transplant.

Stem cells have the potential to turn into many different types of cell.

Many scientists believe it should be possible to harness the cells' ability to grow into different tissues to repair damage and treat disease.

Previously, scientists have grown tendons, cartilages and bladders, which are all less complex.

Sir Magdi, professor of cardiac surgery at Imperial College London, had been working on ways to address a shortage of donated hearts for patients.

Entire heart hope

He said he hoped that soon an entire heart could be grown from stem cells.
He added: "It is an ambitious project but not impossible. If you want me to guess I'd say 10 years."

His team extracted stem cells from bone marrow and cultivated them into heart valve cells.

After they were placed in scaffolds formed from collagen, 3cm-wide discs of heart valve tissue were formed.

Later in the year, these will be implanted into animals such as sheep or pigs to see how well they fare.

Heart valves do not simply open and close like the artificial alternatives currently used in surgery, they are able to anticipate changes in the way the blood flows, and respond accordingly.

Professor Yacoub's team hope the valves they are growing will be equally sophisticated.

No drugs

In theory, if the valve was grown from the patient's own cells there would also be no need to take drugs to stop the body rejecting it.

They would also be potentially much longer lasting than artificial valves, which often have to be replaced after several years.

Dr Adrian Chester, a senior member of the research team, said: "We are attempting to grow a valve that will be functional in adults and children and will be made entirely of living tissue.

"Hopefully it will be able to adapt to its environment, and then just sit there and function just as a normal valve functions under normal physiological conditions."

Dr Chester said ultimately the work could mean that some patients might be able to avoid a heart transplant.

Dr Stephen Minger, a stem cell expert at London's King's College, said Sir Magdi's team were at the forefront of tissue engineering for cardiac disease.

"If the valves they've engineered prove successful in experimental animals, this could open the door to generating complex tissues from stem cells for a wide variety of clinical application.

"But as they stress, this is very preliminary work and the direct translation to human is still some way off in the future."

Professor John Martin of the British Heart Foundation, which supported the research, said: "This opens the possibility that whole parts of the heart may be made in the laboratory from the patient's own stem cells. "

He said patients could benefits because using the tissue could prevent the need for a heart transplant.

Professor Martin added: "Although the work carried out the Harefield is exciting there is a long road to be travelled before patients awaiting heart transplants will benefit from this research."

Heart disease is the UK's biggest killer. More than 200,000 people died from heart disease and strokes in 2004.

And in 2003 nearly 10,000 people needed surgery to replace heart valves with artificial ones.
Cannot think of a name
02-04-2007, 18:55
Woohoo! Free pass to fatty foods and smoking, they can just grow me another heart! Yeeehaaawwwwww!


What?



What do you mean it doesn't work that way?


crackers
Khadgar
02-04-2007, 18:57
Well hopefully the human hearts I love to eat so much will finally go down in price!
Blotting
02-04-2007, 19:04
This sounds like a great medical advance. I hope that they can soon use this for heart transplants.

Well hopefully the human hearts I love to eat so much will finally go down in price!

I don't think that they would sell them for individual consumption, but I'm not 100% sure on this. It seems like the hearts would mainly be used for medical care purposes, and possibly for research as well.
The Treacle Mine Road
02-04-2007, 19:05
I've always wondered what human meat tastes like and now I'll know!
Kenphinium
02-04-2007, 19:17
A wonderful medical advance. Maybe now some people who really need these organs (third world countries or lower-class individuals) will be able to get them.
Egg and Chips II
02-04-2007, 19:49
See America, this is how to win hearts and minds!

Had to be said...
Vetalia
02-04-2007, 20:34
An important advance in tissue engineering, to be sure. It'll also help alleviate the shortage of heart materials on the market and will enhance further research in to the use of stem cells as a source of tissue for various organs.

I'd prefer an enhanced artificial heart or to not require one at all, but a grown one is fine too until I can do that...although keeping the one I currently have healthy is even more important.
Kyronea
02-04-2007, 20:41
It's about time! Hopefully the idiotic far-right wingers in the U.S. won't scream heresy or some other stupid thing to strike this down. It's a wonderful advancement, for us all.
Vetalia
02-04-2007, 20:44
It's about time! Hopefully the idiotic far-right wingers in the U.S. won't scream heresy or some other stupid thing to strike this down. It's a wonderful advancement, for us all.

Apparently, this comes from bone marrow stem cells, so we won't have that to worry about for this innovation.

Eventually, embryonic cells might have to be used, but I'm not worried. More and more people realize that embryonic stem cells have the potential to save millions of lives, and the morality of the issue is clearly in the research's favor.
Dempublicents1
02-04-2007, 21:36
This doesn't seem to be officially published yet. *cries*

Oh well, it'll come out eventually. I'll be interested to see what kind of bioreactor they're using.
Radical Centrists
02-04-2007, 22:31
It's about time! Hopefully the idiotic far-right wingers in the U.S. won't scream heresy or some other stupid thing to strike this down. It's a wonderful advancement, for us all.

...

"British scientists."

...

They may be a much of loud, stupid bastards, but their voices don't carry THAT far. :p