Journal article

Tissue engineering by intrinsic vascularization in an in vivo tissue engineering chamber

W Zhan, D Marre, GM Mitchell, WA Morrison, SY Lim

Journal of Visualized Experiments | JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS | Published : 2016

Abstract

In reconstructive surgery, there is a clinical need for an alternative to the current methods of autologous reconstruction which are complex, costly and trade one defect for another. Tissue engineering holds the promise to address this increasing demand. However, most tissue engineering strategies fail to generate stable and functional tissue substitutes because of poor vascularization. This paper focuses on an in vivo tissue engineering chamber model of intrinsic vascularization where a perfused artery and a vein either as an arteriovenous loop or a flow-through pedicle configuration is directed inside a protected hollow chamber. In this chamber-based system angiogenic sprouting occurs from..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by grant funding from NHMRC and Stafford Fox Medical Foundation. The authors acknowledge the surgical assistance of Sue McKay, Liliana Pepe, Anna Deftereos and Amanda Rixon of the Experimental Medical and Surgical Unit, St. Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne. Support is also provided by the Victorian State Government's Department of Innovation, Industry and Regional Development's Operational Infrastructure Support Program.