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Forgacs is able to print the organs using bioink and biopaper. The bioink contains cellular material that is ripe for building. The biopaper is a gelatin and hyaluranon mixture that has been altered to set and get harder. This allows them to alternate bioink and biopaper. You can see the process in the picture to the right. The result is the ability to build 3Dorganprint1.jpg organic objects. So far, the team is mostly building smaller things like blood vessels. But they have also built part of a chicken heart that started beating synchronously. The researchers want to be able to build the vasculature right along with the organ. They estimate that they could print a kidney, for instance, in around 20 minutes. The organ would then be put into an environment so that it would grow and mature before transplanting into the patient.
But, could you imagine a time when a new organ could be printed, grown, and implanted within a month? That would save countless lives. And it would be an organ that would be genetically identical to the patient and wouldn’t be rejected. And their vasculature printing would immediately help blood get to the new organ. Most current techniques attempt to promote blood vessel invasion after the fact. Now, where did I put that organ toner cartridge?
http://gopaultech.com/blog/2007/11/organ-p...ountless-lives/
I couldn't believe it when a friend told me about this, but it appears to be true. Seems like medicine is going through a genetic revolution even sooner than I thoguht. I wonder what consequences this will have.