Uploaded by yourboycal on Apr 2, 2009
The plastic 3-D printing machine has been around for a few years and man, is that cool. It can replicate most any mechanical system and it will function, too. Now, researchers at Organovo are taking things one step further, promising to be able to print entire organs for transplant patients. That technology would certainly be the jewel in the crown of the 3-D printing industry, but is Organovo living up to the hype? Will this company keep stride with the overactive imagination? Even if Organovo fails to deliver, there are still other promising methods for growing organs in the lab.
Printing blood vessels one plane at a time
Well, not quite. Although the websites generic mission statement alludes to being able to print whole organs, like hearts or kidneys, that technology is quite a long way off. The research published by this federally funded project founded by Dr. Gabor Forgacs, a researcher at the University of Missouri, indicates that the company is first working on printing fully functioning blood vessels and arteries.
Organovo claims that printing blood vessels from the patients own cells will enable a transplant, like a bypass surgery, to work better. There is little to no chance of the patient rejecting the cells, as they are autologous. Another advantage of the bioprinting system is that there is no need for plastic scaffolding, which is said to cause inflammation and reduce the effectiveness of the transplant.
The idea behind the printing system is that the organ is printed layer by layer. A printer, using cell globules as ink, places them down onto a bio-degradable sheet of paper, where the cells naturally fuse together to create a small piece of the organ. A piece of bio-paper is put between each layer of the organ and, after all of the cells in the same layer are fused, the paper disintegrates and allows the different layers to fuse to each other. Eventually, after many layers, the blood vessel will materialize and be fully functional. Take a look at the video for a better explanation and some pretty 3-D computer model rendering:
There is a lot to be said about hyping a product. Much like the law of inverse excellence haunts the cinema industry (the more trailers you see on the television, the worse it will be), the more people make a big deal out of this technology, the less likely we are to be impressed with it. Even the founder of the company in the above video admits that growing entire organs is more of a dream that could be achieved within our lifetimes, not an imminent technological breakthrough. That should not detract, however, from the capabilities of this technology that may be just over the horizon. Okay, so a few blood vessels are not as cool as a new lung, but such a technology could make medical practices that are already established even safer. To not have to worry over tissue rejection would be cause for celebration among most surgeons.
So, is this technology something to be excited about? Well, yes. We are now capable of regenerating parts of our own bodies. Regardless of which parts, that is still a neat proposition. Come on, most men cant even regenerate their own hair, no less new blood vessels. But Organovo will be a company to watch for a long time coming. They have set forth a difficult goal to achieve, one day reproducing entire organs, and it is wholly possible that they may accomplish this many decades down the road. For now, though, we will simply avoid the hype and look forward to not having to worry about tissue rejection if the Tarot cards forecast a bypass surgery.-http://singularityhub.com/2009/06/15/organovo-pioneers-3-d-organ-printi
www.youtube.com/v/80DhBLEhdzk
Category:
Tags:
- human organs
- printing
- new science
- science
- experiment
- breakthrough
- cure
- stem cell
- cancer
- diabetes
- fix
- treatment
- new limbs
- blown limbs
- limbs
- missing arm
- amputees
- regeneration
- abiogensis
- reconstruction
- destruction
- printer limb rinting
- thoughtware tv
- amazing
- discovery
- astounding
- funny
- obama
- nwo
- bail out
- ron paul
- human parts
- kidneys
- lungs
- stomah
- arms
- legs
- heads
- brains
- fingers
- death
- fire
- 9/11
License:
Standard YouTube License
-
10 likes, 0 dislikes
17:25
Anthony Atala: Printing a human kidneyby TEDtalksDirector114,907 views
9:59
The Golden Ratio (Phi) scientific miracles in kabbaby yourboycal19,464 views
17:25
Anthony Atala: Printing a human kidney (TED)by carvakan6,509 views
9:44
Organ Printing with Dr. Gabor Forgacs (Part 1 of 6)by mercola6,187 views
2:41:26
Zeitgeist Moving Forward 2011 (Full Movie)by KilluminatiGroup34,283 views
9:40
Organ Printing with Dr. Gabor Forgacs (Part 2 of 6)by mercola2,536 views
2:41:26
Zeitgeist: Moving Forward 2011 spreadby petrutek277,645 views
10:20
MAJOR EMBRYONIC STEM CELL BREAKTHROUGHSby thevirtueallliberal1,337 views
8:16
Regenerative Medicine: Re-Growing Body Partsby dutchice91159,397 views
9:48
How to make a wooden organ pipe - Part 1 of 3by raphig55,721 views
6:29
Storage Wars: Sneak Peekby AETV119,575 views
5:20
Cutting Edge Prosthetic Armsby tpcfan489,897 views
11:10
Understanding Blindness and the Brain (Brian Wandell, Stanford University)by StanfordUniversity18,095 views
3:22
Engineering Organs from Scratchby arlindbosh8,108 views
10:14
Stem Cell Organ Regeneration-MoneyTV with Donald Baillargeonby MoneyTV01383 views
7:14
What Can You Make With a 3D Printer?by team222badbrad825,252 views
0:28
Muammar Gaddafi deadby pundi000959,925 views
5:59
Adult Stem Cell vs Embryonic Stem Cell Research Ethics Videoby rosaryfilms32,997 views
0:30
Amazing Organ Printing - Mfoundation PSAby MethuselahFoundation2,310 views
9:42
Kidney Transplants 2/2by UMMCVideos437 views
- Loading more suggestions...
wow !!!!! this guys are amaizing !!! this are the doctors of the future
ratarob 1 year ago
thats the guy from g4
Ropioly 2 years ago