Text Only
Search Special English

Growing Replacement Organs From Patients' Own Cells

13 June 2006
Health Report - Download MP3 audio clip
Health Report - Download RealAudio audio clip
Listen to Health Report audio clip

This is Shep O’Neal with the VOA Special English Health Report.

Dr. Anthony Atala
Dr. Anthony Atala
Around the world, there is a shortage of replacement organs.  Some doctors see a possible solution: growing new organs from patients' own cells.  Doctor Anthony Atala is director of the Institute for Regenerative Medicine at Wake Forest University in North Carolina. 

He and other doctors recently described an experimental treatment with seven young people who had diseased bladders.  They received new bladders grown from their own cells.  The report appeared in the Lancet.

The seven children and teenagers were born with incomplete closure of the backbone.  This disorder affected their bladder, the small organ that stores the body's liquid wastes.  High pressure from bladder disease can damage the kidneys.  Also, their bladders leaked urine, as often as every thirty minutes.

Doctor Atala began work on engineering bladders in nineteen ninety.  Nine years later, he operated on the first patient.  The seven patients were ages four to nineteen.  At the time, he directed a tissue engineering program at Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts. 

For a century doctors have used tissue from the intestines to repair bladders.  But problems are common with this method. 

The engineered organs are grown from bladder cells and muscle cells taken from the patient.  Through the process of culturing, the cells divide and grow in the laboratory. 

The cells are placed on a structural form shaped like a bladder.  Cells are placed on top of cells on top of other cells.  Doctor Atala compares the process to making a layer cake. 

The bladder is then warmed.  The cells continue to grow until the new organ is ready.  Doctors then remove part of the diseased bladder and attach the new one, still connected to the structure.  The form is made of material that breaks down in the body. 

The body can reject tissue that comes from another person.  In this case, since it grew from the patients' own cells, there was no risk of rejection.

The complete process takes about two months.  The doctors reported that the engineered bladders have worked well.  The seven patients must empty them through a tube.  But the leakage problem improved and, most importantly, the dangerous pressure eased.

In his laboratory, Doctor Atala is now working to grow twenty different kinds of tissues and organs, including hearts.

This VOA Special English Health Report was written by Caty Weaver.  Read and listen to our reports at voaspecialenglish.com.  This is Shep O’Neal.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version
  Featured Story
City of Pittsburgh Enjoys Its Days in the Sun  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Health Insurance Eases Worries of Senegal's 'Market Women'  Audio Clip Available
Mary Cassatt, 1844-1926: She Broke Social Barriers With her Art  Audio Clip Available
Words And Their Stories: Hold Your Horses!  Audio Clip Available
Poor Nations Get G8 Promise of $20 Billion Toward Food Security  Audio Clip Available
How Did He Do It? Lakers Coach Phil Jackson and His 10 NBA Titles  Audio Clip Available
Does US Need a Second Stimulus Plan?  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: Hopes, Fears and the Election of 1860  Audio Clip Available
Studying in the US: From 'In Loco Parentis' to 'Partnership'  Audio Clip Available
Race to the Moon: NASA and the Early Apollo Flights of the 1960s  Audio Clip Available
Experts Urge Limits on Widely Used Pain Drug  Audio Clip Available
Could Typhoons Help to Prevent Severe Quakes?  Audio Clip Available
Yard Work: When People Choose Sod Over Seed  Audio Clip Available