Story WX5E 3D-printing for live blood vessels

3D-printing for live blood vessels

by
in science on (#WX5E)
story imageBlood vessels are vital parts of the body's circulatory system that supply the organs with nutrients and remove waste. Scientists have developed artificial tissue from the heart, liver and lungs, but creating a synthetic network of blood vessels to support these organs has been a challenge. Scientists from the Universities of Sydney, Harvard, Stanford and MIT have been working together to overcome this challenge. Now, the researchers have created 'live' artificial blood vessels in a lab using 3D-printing methods.

Right now, the actual structures don't bear much resemblance to what you'd find in a person -- you get a "spaghetti bowl" of vessels. Scientists hope to organize these vessels the way they exist in nature, though. If that happens, you could one day see artificial tissue samples and even transplants that are about as realistic as you can get.

http://www.engadget.com/2015/12/06/scientists-3d-print-live-blood-vessels/
Reply 4 comments

Cheap solar cells (Score: 0)

by entropy@pipedot.org on 2015-12-07 19:15 (#WYR7)

I'm still waiting for the cheaper solar cells they've been talking about for the last 15 years....but never, ever materialize for the consumer. Last time I checked the breakeven for solar was 15-25 years and the expected useful lifetime of the system was around 20 years which is absolutely pitiful.

Re: Cheap solar cells (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2015-12-07 21:44 (#WZ63)

I think you posted in the wrong story ...

Bio-manufacturing (Score: 2)

by chk6@pipedot.org on 2015-12-08 13:21 (#X191)

What the difference between bio-manufacturing and 3-D printing artificial organic matter?

Re: Bio-manufacturing (Score: 1)

by hyper@pipedot.org on 2015-12-10 09:11 (#X7YJ)

The amount of profit a corporation claims in tax benefits?