3D bone cells offer hope to injured
SCIENTISTS from three Scottish universities have grown three-dimensional bone cells in the laboratory in a breakthrough development that could help transform the lives of patients.
It is hoped the discovery could in future be used to replace or repair damaged sections of bone, helping patients including landmine victims.
The scientists used technology originally developed to detect gravitational waves to generate tissue engineered bone graft, the latest development in a technique known as “nanokicking”.
Bone is the second most grafted tissue after blood and is used in reconstructive, maxillofacial and orthopaedic surgeries.
However surgeons can currently only harvest limited amounts of living bone from the patient for use in graft, and bone from other donors is likely to be rejected by the body.
Instead, surgeons must rely on inferior donor sources which contain no cells capable of regenerating bone, limiting the size of repairs they can effect.
The researchers, from the universities of Glasgow, Strathclyde, the West of Scotland and Galway, hope the new technique will prevent the problem of rejection.
Scientists have already used bone-growing technology to save a dog’s leg from amputation and hope to begin human trials in around three years’ time.
Matthew Dalby, professor of cell engineering at the University of Glasgow, is one of the lead authors of the paper, published in Nature Biomedical Engineering.
He said: “This is an exciting step forward.”