Reply to Thread New Thread |
![]() |
#1 |
|
Post Date: 10 Jun 2010 Queen's University Brian Amsden is expecting that in about ten years, a muscle, spinal-cord or heart valve will have the ability to recover it self after a personal injury or illness. The chemical engineering professor, along side boffins from the University of Western Ontario and University of Toronto, happens to be attempting to create tiny plastic materials to simply help speed the recovery process and repair human muscle. While using the polymers to simply help develop muscles may seem like some thing out of Frankenstein, it's really very normal. Dr. Amsden is attempting to build up the method where stem cells from fat are positioned on a plastic prosthetic that influences cell growth and that's later inserted it right into a person's body. "I can't consider such a thing Frankensteinish about this since every thing is you. The one thing that's not you may be the plastic which ultimately and is biodegradable vanishes, so all you've left is the own tissues," says Dr. Amsden. Muscle executive was initially suggested in mid 1980s and using polymers to simply help promote the procedure came into being in early 1990s so it's a reasonably new area. The effect could be large on Canada's aging populace. Because they get this study and older allows people within their 60s and 70s to reside healthier many seniors need to stay effective. Dr. Amsden's results were recently introduced at the Advanced level Foods and Materials Network annual meeting in H Source: Jordan Onesi Queen's University alifax
|
![]() |
Reply to Thread New Thread |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 2 (0 members and 2 guests) | |
|