Heart Bypass Gets New
Source For Replacement Blood Vessels: Fibrin-Based Tevs Top Collagen, Other
Types
Next steps: According to Stelios Andreadis, the
team is preparing to submit a grant application to the National Institutes
of Health “to improve vessels’ mechanical strength.” They will also seek to
make the matrix stronger using recombinant DNA techniques and “engineer
vessels from bone marrow-derived stem cells to provide a source of
autologous cells for transplantation, and therefore avoid the use of native
vessels as a cell source,” Andreadis noted.
Source and funding: The study, “Fibrin-based
functional and implantable small diameter blood vessels,” by Daniel D.
Swartz, James A. Russell and Stelios T. Andreadis from SUNY Buffalo appears
on the online version of the American Journal of Physiology-Heart and
Circulatory Physiology, published by the American Physiological
Society.
Seed money for the in vivo work came from a SUNY
Buffalo grant and Daniel Swartz received support from Buffalo Children’s
Hospital.
Editor’s note: A copy of the research paper by
Swartz et al. is available to the media. Members of the media are encouraged
to obtain an electronic version and to interview members of the research
team. To do so, please contact Donna Krupa at the American Physiological
Society, (301) 634-7209, cell (703) 967-2751 or
dkrupa@the-aps.org.
* * *
The
American Physiological Society was founded in 1887 to foster basic and
applied bioscience. The Bethesda, Maryland-based society has more than
10,000 members and publishes 14 peer-reviewed journals containing almost
4,000 articles annually.
APS
provides a wide range of research, educational and career support and
programming to further the contributions of physiology to understanding the
mechanisms of diseased and healthy states. In May, APS received
the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science,
Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM).
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