Pretty awesome, just a shame the outside is getting a facelift and is half-covered in scaffold.
Cells are harvested from a stem or donor, or ideally the host, and placed on the scaffold.
The concept is amazingly simple: A polymer scaffold is designed in the shape of, say, an individual's liver.
Edward was hit on the head with a scaffold pole and taken upstairs while bleeding profusely, the court heard.
He then took brain stem cells from another rat and grew part of the spinal cord on a polymer scaffold.
But as Mr Carey tells it there is a gloomy inevitability to his progress from the cradle to the scaffold.
Instead of using a man-made scaffold, Dr. Taylor had used the scaffolding from an actual rat heart as the starting point.
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These organ regeneration projects use three-dimensional printers to print out a bio degradable scaffold and then populate it with stem cells.
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Students from Slovenia were the grand prize winners in 2010 for designing a DNA scaffold that accelerates the synthesis of particular proteins.
She said that when human stem cells were put into a heart scaffold in 2010, they seemed to know just where to go.
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The scaffold then has to be injected with at least seven types of cells that make up the solid part of the liver.
Stephen Wilson, a chemist at New York University, discovered that the surface of the fullerene molecule could be used as a scaffold to support other molecules.
He was supposed to have damaged his leg years ago, falling from a scaffold, but Shelley had seen him limp with a different leg on different days.
Amidst all this secret activity, only one expert seems to have managed to ascend the seventy-foot scaffold uninvited, a doctoral student by the name of Johanna Kolbe.
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But the prospect of a near future in which scaffold-riding professionals are replaced by automatons doesn't appeal to everyone particularly window washers and the New Yorkers who romanticize them.
Within a few weeks, the remaining real bone attaches itself to the implant and grows through the porous scaffold, encasing the implant in living bone within 18 months.
Mr White said more recently it had been used in Scotland as a "scaffold" for "patients cells to be grown and either implanted or put back in the body".
In later years, I welcomed these same children as older students into my classroom to scaffold their learning as they proceeded toward their next level of knowledge and understanding.
They had used a small piece of each patient's own tissue from the bladder, then grew the cells in a lab onto a mesh scaffold shaped like a urethra.
Biodegradable plastic is then poured into the mould to make enough slices that can be sandwiched together using pressure and heat, to create a scaffold for a whole liver.
The spheres are then dissolved to leave a 3D-metal scaffold onto which a nickel-tin alloy is added to form the anode, and a mineral called manganese oxyhydroxide to form the cathode.
When there are a sufficient number of cells, scientists "seed" them -- much like you would seed a new lawn -- onto a mesh scaffold that is shaped like a urethra.
Germeshausen Professor of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering at MIT, is a founder of the budding field of tissue engineering--of restoring, maintaining and improving tissue by growing it, in vitro, on a biodegradable polymer (plastic) scaffold.
One of the most harrowing final scenes in all of opera is the ending of Poulenc's "Dialogues of the Carmelites, " when the nuns condemned by the French Revolution walk one by one to the scaffold, singing a gradually thinning chorus punctuated by the slashing sounds of a guillotine.
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