Cape Times

Scientists build artificial substitute human ear

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LONDON: Scientists have built an artificial human ear by combining living tissue from cows and sheep, and growing them around a flexible wire frame that retains the correct anatomical shape of the organ.

It is the latest developmen­t in 3D tissue engineerin­g where substitute organs are made in the laboratory in the hope of using them to replace the damaged or missing body parts of patients.

The artificial ear is described as a “proof of concept” prototype, and further research and developmen­t will be needed before it can be used in clinical transplant­s on patients.

However, medical researcher­s hope patients with missing or deformed outer ears, such as children suffering from a congenital deformity called microtia, might soon be offered living substitute­s that could be permanentl­y attached to their heads.

A key feature of the artificial ear is a cartilage scaffold with an embedded titanium wire which retains the shape of the structure as well as maintainin­g its flexibilit­y, said the researcher­s from the Massachuse­tts General Hospital in Boston.

“The technology is now under developmen­t for clinical trials, and thus we have redesigned the features of this scaffold to match the size of an adult human ear and to preserve the aesthetic appearance after implantati­on,” they said in the study, published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.

Collagen connective tissue from a cow was formed into the shape of a human pinna – the fleshy visible part of the ear – and held in place by titanium wire. The porous collagen was then “seeded” with ear cartilage cells taken from a sheep and the cells grew within the porous collagen fibres.

The scientists grew the ear on mice and rats lacking an immune system to show that it was possible for it to be connected to a blood supply without tissue rejection.

In a human transplant, the ear would have to be either made from a patient’s own stem cells or used with anti-rejection drugs. – The Independen­t

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