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Heart 3D-printed using human cells

- Ryan W. Miller

A team of Israeli scientists “printed” a heart with a patient’s own cells in a world first, researcher­s say.

Past researcher­s had been able to print simple tissues without blood vessels, the team said. The new developmen­t is the first time “anyone anywhere has successful­ly engineered and printed an entire heart replete with cells, blood vessels, ventricles and chambers,” Tal Dvir of Tel Aviv University told The Jerusalem Post.

Dvir and his team reported the findings Monday in Advanced Science.

The heart, about the size of a rabbit’s, is too small for a human, but the process used to create it shows the potential for one day being able to 3Dprint patches and maybe full transplant­s, the team said.

Because the heart is made from the patient’s own biological material, it reduces the chance the transplant would fail, according to the research paper.

The team used fatty tissues then separated and “reprogramm­ed” the cellular and a-cellular materials. Stem cells that become heart cells were then created.

The developmen­t is being touted as a “major breakthrou­gh” in medicine and one that could help battle heart disease, the leading cause of death in the United States, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Patients will no longer have to wait for transplant­s or take medication­s to prevent their rejection,” Tel Aviv University said in a statement. “Instead, the needed organs will be printed, fully personaliz­ed for every patient.”

The research is still a long way off from clearing the way to transplant the 3D-printed hearts into humans, the team says.

Dvir told the news organizati­on Bloomberg that the heart the team printed will need another month before cells mature enough to beat and contract. Tests on animals would need to be done before the technology could be tried in humans, he added.

It would take a whole day and billions, rather than millions, of cells to print a human heart, Dvir told Bloomberg.

But Dvir remains hopeful. “Maybe, in 10 years, there will be organ printers in the finest hospitals around the world, and these procedures will be conducted routinely,” he told The Times of Israel.

 ?? JACK GUEZ/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Israeli team’s heart, about the size of a rabbit’s, features technology that has the potential for use in humans.
JACK GUEZ/AFP/GETTY IMAGES The Israeli team’s heart, about the size of a rabbit’s, features technology that has the potential for use in humans.

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