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Vascular Tissue Engineering

Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering, 2001
▪ Abstract  The development of a tissue-engineered blood vessel substitute has motivated much of the research in the area of cardiovascular tissue engineering over the past 20 years. Several methodologies have emerged for constructing blood vessel replacements with biological functionality.
R M, Nerem, D, Seliktar
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Vascularization in tissue engineering

Trends in Biotechnology, 2008
Tissue engineering has been an active field of research for several decades now. However, the amount of clinical applications in the field of tissue engineering is still limited. One of the current limitations of tissue engineering is its inability to provide sufficient blood supply in the initial phase after implantation.
Rouwkema, Jeroen   +2 more
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Vascular Tissue Engineering and Vascularized 3D Tissue Regeneration

Regenerative Medicine, 2007
Vascularized tissue regeneration has a great deal of potential in clinical medicine. Appropriate 3D tissue regeneration that yields tissue with the desired function and shape requires both growth signals and vascularization. In this paper, we discuss vascularized tissue regeneration using various vessel systems: artificial vessel, autologous vascular ...
Rei, Ogawa   +2 more
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Vascularized Tissue-Engineered Ears

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 2006
A paucity of appropriate regional and local matching tissue can compromise the reconstruction efforts in areas of the body that require specialized tissue. The current study uses techniques of vascular prefabrication, tissue culturing, and capsule formation to form a vascularized ear construct that is reliably transferable on its blood supply.Thirty ...
Michael W, Neumeister   +2 more
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Tissue–engineered vascular grafts

Nature Medicine, 1996
Advances in cell transplantation and material sciences are being combined to create more biocompatible tissue engineered medical devices (pages 90–93).
S K, Williams, B E, Jarrell
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Leaf hydraulics II: Vascularized tissues

Journal of Theoretical Biology, 2014
Current models of leaf hydration employ an Ohm's law analogy of the leaf as an ideal capacitor, neglecting the resistance to flow between cells, or treat the leaf as a plane sheet with a source of water at fixed potential filling the mid-plane, neglecting the discrete placement of veins as well as their resistance.
Rockwell, Fulton E.   +2 more
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Engineering vascularized tissue

Nature Biotechnology, 2005
The creation in vitro of vascularized skeletal muscle represents a first step to the engineering of more complex tissue architectures.
Rakesh K Jain   +4 more
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Vascular reactivity and tissue oxygenation

Intensive Care Medicine, 1995
When blood carries less than the normal amount of oxygen (CaO2) or when blood flow (Q) decreases, oxygen delivery (DO2 = QCaO2) is gradually reduced. Compensatory adjustments occur in an attempt to satisfy the oxygen requirements of peripheral tissues.
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Small-diameter vascular tissue engineering

Nature Reviews Cardiology, 2013
Vascular occlusion remains the leading cause of death in Western countries, despite advances made in balloon angioplasty and conventional surgical intervention. Vascular surgery, such as CABG surgery, arteriovenous shunts, and the treatment of congenital anomalies of the coronary artery and pulmonary tracts, requires biologically responsive vascular ...
Dawit G, Seifu   +3 more
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Vascularization Strategies for Tissue Engineers

Regenerative Medicine, 2015
All tissue-engineered substitutes (with the exception of cornea and cartilage) require a vascular network to provide the nutrient and oxygen supply needed for their survival in vivo. Unfortunately the process of vascular ingrowth into an engineered tissue can take weeks to occur naturally and during this time the tissues become starved of essential ...
Lindsey, Dew   +2 more
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