Module 3- Organs and Bioprinting Flashcards

1
Q

Why does there remain a need for partial and whole bladder regeneration?

A

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

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2
Q

Complex layers of the bladder

A

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

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3
Q

Range of therapeutic treatment for the bladder

A
  • 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
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4
Q

The regenerative medicine approach for bladders

A
  • 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
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5
Q

UBM increases bladder compliance

A
  • 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.
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6
Q

Autologous cell regenerative approach

A

36 months did not improve compliance — perhaps because autologous cells were already failing

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7
Q

Decellularized scaffolds

A

Decellularization typically consists of both physical (temperature, force, pressure) and enzymatic steps (immersion or perfusion).

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8
Q

Perfusion decellularization

A

Perfusion decellularization is the primary method for whole-organ decellularization

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9
Q

Bladder Acellular Matrix (BAM)

A
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10
Q

Replacing lungs

A
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11
Q

Lung tissue engineering

A

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.

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12
Q

Bioengineered lungs video

A

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyHVlU1dNoE

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13
Q

The future of lungs

A
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14
Q

Bioprinting video

A

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDV0thJFnpQ

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15
Q

The complex bioprinting process…

A
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16
Q

A Comparison of Bioprinter Types

A
17
Q

Examples of human-scale bio-printed tissues.

A
18
Q

Case Study: Creating Vasculature

A
  • Studies demonstrate that we can use tissue engineering to produce grafts for medium to large vasculature, but creating microvasculature remains elusive.
  • Scaffolds were composed of polylactic acid (PLA) and spun into porous nanofiber conduits using electrospinning technology.
19
Q

Microvasculature to engraft organs

A

Resolution for capillaries remains a problem — we can incorporate angiogenic growth factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) to nurture capillary growth.

20
Q

Can they perfuse? Media can indeed circulate through.

A
21
Q

Another potential solution to creating vasculature

A