Module 3- Organs and Bioprinting Flashcards
Why does there remain a need for partial and whole bladder regeneration?
Pediatric population:
● Abnormal development
● Neurogenic bladder-associated
with spina bifida
Adults:
● Prone to anatomical and functional
loss (surgery, radiation, repeated infections, cancer)
Aging population:
● Muscle under-activity
Complex layers of the bladder
Urothelium — an impenetrable barrier that allows for urine containment
Lamina propria — houses the vasculature needed for oxygen and nutrients
Muscle — facilitates urine storage and coordinates the movements needed to expel urine
Range of therapeutic treatment for the bladder
- Therapeutic management can range from conservative to minimally invasive to surgery.
- The current standard of care consists of augmenting the bladder with portions of GI tissue
- This approach, however, lacks barrier properties and can lead to…
● Tendency to adsorb waste products
● Infections
● Potential malignancy
The regenerative medicine approach for bladders
- The regenerative medicine approach consists of a urinary bladder matrix (UBM) being ECM derived from a porcine urinary bladder.
- The UBM consists of an epithelial membrane and lamina propria
UBM increases bladder compliance
- Compliance is defined as the increase in pressure per unit of volume (V/P). Normally the bladder is very compliant and may be filled to large volumes with very little increase in pressure.
- Bladder compliance increases by the same percentage comparing ileum augmentation to UBM.
- UBM does not have associated risks like GI tissue.
Autologous cell regenerative approach
36 months did not improve compliance — perhaps because autologous cells were already failing
Decellularized scaffolds
Decellularization typically consists of both physical (temperature, force, pressure) and enzymatic steps (immersion or perfusion).
Perfusion decellularization
Perfusion decellularization is the primary method for whole-organ decellularization
Bladder Acellular Matrix (BAM)
Replacing lungs
Lung tissue engineering
Design considerations:
1. Extensive surface area
2. Very thin alveolar-capillary
membranes
3. Viscoelastic behavior
Synthetic scaffolds? Not enough control to recapitulate the hierarchy needed.
3D bioprinters? Do not have the resolution to create the gas exchange capillary-alveolar capillary network.
Bioengineered lungs video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyHVlU1dNoE
The future of lungs
Bioprinting video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDV0thJFnpQ
The complex bioprinting process…