Growing Cartilage From Stem Cells
Main Category: Stem Cell ResearchAlso Included In: Arthritis / Rheumatology
Article Date: 22 Oct 2009 - 6:00 PDT
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Damaged knee joints might one day be repaired with cartilage grown from stem cells in a laboratory, based on research by Professor Kyriacos Athanasiou, chair of the UC Davis Department of Biomedical Engineering and his colleagues.
Using adult stem cells from bone marrow and skin as well as human embryonic stem cells, Athanasiou and his group have already grown cartilage tissue in the lab. Now they are experimenting with various chemical and mechanical stimuli to improve its properties.
Cartilage is one of the very rare tissues that lacks the ability to heal itself. When damaged by injury or osteoarthritis, the effects can be long-lasting and devastating.
"If I cut a tiny line on articular cartilage (the cartilage that covers the surfaces of bones at joints), it will never be erased," Athanasiou said. "It's like writing on the moon. If I go back to look at it a year later, it will look exactly the same."
Work that Athanasiou's group began in the early 1990s at Rice University has resulted in the only FDA-approved products for treatment of small lesions on articular cartilage. (In total, Athanaisou's patents have resulted in 15 FDA-approved products.)
"This will be live, biological cartilage that will not only fill defects, but will potentially be able to resurface the entire surface of joints that have been destroyed by osteoarthritis," Athanasiou said. Currently, joint replacements using metal and plastic prosthetics are the only recourse for the one in five adults who will suffer major joint damage from osteoarthritis.
Source:
Andy Fell
University of California - Davis
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MLA
13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/168333.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/168333.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
I have something to look forward to.
posted by redmond on 4 Oct 2011 at 7:35 pmI just had arthroscopic surgery 2 weeks ago and they trimmed most of the cartalidge on the outside part of my knee. I play basketball and every time i make a sharp cut my bone grinds, and i have some deterioration on the bottom of my femur bone because of it. They said i should think about quitting high impact sports because it would increase the chances of me getting arthritis. I just turned 24 and this injury happen 10 years ago, but i never thought it was this serious because and i was getting ready for the football season and i never had it checked.
I was never gonna let this stop me from playing sports and now i can look, hopefully to the immediate future, that i won't have a 50 year old knee and worry about arthritis or a knee transplant
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