Bethesda,
MD—A team of London scientists have taken a major step in
making the use of artificial veins and arteries in coronary bypass
grafts a reality. In a study published in the June 2008 print issue
of
The FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org),
researchers describe how they developed this
artificial graft tissue by combining man-made materials with human
cells to make it elastic and durable and so it can attach to host
tissue.
“Obviously this advance could be a medical breakthrough that
saves millions of lives around the world,” said Gerald
Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of
The FASEB Journal,
“but
even more tantalizing is the successful fusing of living cells to
nonliving substances that actually—heal—by forming
a stronger bond to each other and to host tissue once put in use. This
might even be called a start toward ‘cyborg
engineering.’”
In the research report, scientists describe how they took an elastic
scaffold (the material that gives the artificial graft its shape) of
compliant poly(carbonate-urea)urethane and incorporated human vascular
smooth muscle cells and epithelial cells from umbilical cords. Then
they took the artificial grafts and simulated blood flow in the
laboratory to test their durability. They found that as the pulsing
fluid flow slowly increased, the artificial graft’s
performance actually improved. The researchers hypothesize that this
improvement is because the movement of fluid through the graft
stimulates the smooth muscle and epithelial cells to release proteins
that strengthen their ability to attachment to the elastic scaffold and
other tissues.
“The notion that any body part could be engineered in a lab,
attach to existing tissue ‘naturally,’ and grow
stronger as it is being used is something thought completely impossible
just 20 years ago,” Weissmann added. “It is only a
matter of time before human tissues can be engineered to be at least as
good as the originals, and this study moves us toward that
reality.”
According to the National Institutes of Health, coronary artery bypass
grafting is the most common open heart surgery in the United States,
with 500,000 procedures performed each year. It is one of only a few
surgical options to treat coronary artery disease, which is the leading
cause of death in the United States. During this surgery, a healthy
vein or artery from another part of the body is connected to the
blocked coronary artery to route blood flow around a blocked passage.
Current procedures are limited, however, by the availability of healthy
veins or arteries as well as the patient’s ability to survive
both aspects of the procedure. Furthermore, many patients experience
significant pain in the area where the vein or artery was removed.
Using artificial veins or arteries instead would reduce recovery time,
reduce pain, and save lives by making this type of surgery more
available to people who need it.
The FASEB Journal
(http://www.fasebj.org) is published by the
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) and
is consistently ranked among the top three biology journals worldwide
by the Institute for Scientific Information. FASEB comprises 21
nonprofit societies with more than 80,000 members, making it the
largest coalition of biomedical research associations in the United
States. FASEB advances biological science through collaborative
advocacy for research policies that promote scientific progress and
education and lead to improvements in human health.
Article details:
S. T. Rashid, B. Fuller, G. Hamilton, and A. M. Seifalian.
Tissue engineering of a hybrid bypass graft
for coronary and lower limb bypass surgery. FASEB J. 2008 22:
2084-2089.