Speaking of the coming wonders, did you catch the headline on Friday that the first synthetically grown transplant was performed? Actually, from what I gather, the procedure was performed on June 9 and the patient was released from the hospital on Friday.
Scientists used a synthetic lattice coated in the recipient’s own stem cells to grow him a new trachea which they then successfully implanted, replacing his cancerous one, without the fear of rejection that comes with transplants that come from organ donors.
The funny thing is that this almost isn’t even news. Discover’s round-up of links on the story include regular mainstream press, not just futuristic tech blogs. USA Today cites George Daley, director of stem cell transplantation at Children’s Hospital Boston as saying, “The scientific advance is pretty minimal. Tissue engineers have been marrying cells to matrices to regrow parts for many years.”
So, Ok fine. Been there done that with the new organ growing. What’s amazing to me, though, is that they made this trachea in two days. Doesn’t it take longer than that to grow one… the first time?









