Surgeons carry out first synthetic windpipe transplant

jason

Seanchaí
Staff member
Surgeons in Sweden have carried out the world's first synthetic organ transplant.
Scientists in London created an artificial windpipe which was then coated in stem cells from the patient.
Crucially, the technique does not need a donor, and there is no risk of the organ being rejected. The surgeons stress a windpipe can also be made within days.
The 36-year-old cancer patient is doing well a month after the operation.
Professor Paolo Macchiarini from Italy led the pioneering surgery, which took place at the Karolinska University Hospital.
In an interview with the BBC, he said he now hopes to use the technique to treat a nine-month-old child in Korea who was born with a malformed windpipe or trachea.
Professor Macchiarini already has 10 other windpipe transplants under his belt - most notably the world's first tissue-engineered tracheal transplant in 2008 on 30-year-old Spanish woman Claudia Costillo - but all required a donor.



more BBC News - Surgeons carry out first synthetic windpipe transplant
 

Bob Franks

Past District Deputy Grand Lecturer
Surgeons in Sweden have carried out the world's first synthetic organ transplant.
Scientists in London created an artificial windpipe which was then coated in stem cells from the patient.
Crucially, the technique does not need a donor, and there is no risk of the organ being rejected. The surgeons stress a windpipe can also be made within days.
The 36-year-old cancer patient is doing well a month after the operation.
Professor Paolo Macchiarini from Italy led the pioneering surgery, which took place at the Karolinska University Hospital.
In an interview with the BBC, he said he now hopes to use the technique to treat a nine-month-old child in Korea who was born with a malformed windpipe or trachea.
Professor Macchiarini already has 10 other windpipe transplants under his belt - most notably the world's first tissue-engineered tracheal transplant in 2008 on 30-year-old Spanish woman Claudia Costillo - but all required a donor.



more BBC News - Surgeons carry out first synthetic windpipe transplant
According to the ABC News, the process took less than 2 days in the vat to grow the tissue on the matrix from the patient's own stem cells.
WOW!

S&F
 

Winter

I've been here before
That is impressive. How long before we can recreate almost any organ that is damaged?
 

BukeyeJackson

ViMH Advisory Board
I read a report that said the first 150 yo person could be born already and that the first person to live to 1000 could be born within their lifetime.
 
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