German scientists create see-through
human organs
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[May 01, 2019]
By Ayhan Uyanik
MUNICH (Reuters) - Researchers in Germany
have created transparent human organs using a new technology that could
pave the way to print three-dimensional body parts such as kidneys for
transplants.
Scientists led by Ali Erturk at Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich
have developed a technique that uses a solvent to make organs such as
the brain and kidneys transparent.
The organ is then scanned by lasers in a microscope that allows
researchers to capture the entire structure, including the blood vessels
and every single cell in its specific location.
Using this blueprint, researchers print out the scaffold of the organ.
They then load the 3D printer with stem cells which act as "ink" and are
injected into the correct position making the organ functional.
While 3D printing is already used widely to produce spare parts for
industry, Erturk said the development marks a step forward for 3D
printing in the medical field.
Until now 3D-printed organs lacked detailed cellular structures because
they were based on images from computer tomography or MRI machines, he
said.
"We can see where every single cell is located in transparent human
organs. And then we can actually replicate exactly the same, using 3D
bioprinting technology to make a real functional organ," he said.
"Therefore, I believe we are much closer to a real human organ for the
first time now."
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Dr. Ali Ertuerk, Group Leader at the Institute for Stroke and
Dementia Research (ISD) at the Ludwig MaximillianÕs University,
holds at a transparent mouse at his laboratory in Munich, Germany
April 23, 2019. Mr. Ertuerk and his team developed DISCO
transparency technology which is used by scientists from diverse
biomedical research fields to generate high resolution views of
intact rodent organs and bodies, a milestone on the way to generate
3D-bioprinted human organs. REUTERS/Michael Dalder
Erturk's team plan to start by creating a bioprinted pancreas over
the next 2-3 years and also hope to develop a kidney within 5-6
years.
The researchers will first test to see whether animals can survive
with the bioprinted organs and could start clinical trials within
5-10 years, he said.
(Reporting by Ayhan Uyanik; Writing by Caroline Copley; Editing by
Susan Fenton)
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