Tissue Engineering for Reconstruction of the Thumb
- 17 May 2001
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 344 (20) , 1547-1548
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm200105173442011
Abstract
For nearly two decades, surgeons have used cultured autologous cells for reconstructive surgery. The most notable successful application involved the removal of a specimen of skin from a badly burned patient, expansion of the keratinocytes in vitro, and subsequent application of the cultured epidermal autografts onto the burn wounds to resurface the skin.1 A recent report in the Journal described successful reconstruction of an occluded pulmonary artery in a young girl with a tissue-engineered vessel graft.2 Advances in cellular biology and biomaterials science have been brought together in a new discipline called “tissue engineering,” which has its own research centers, . . .Keywords
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