Military Scientist Regenerate Human Organs

PiSigma

"the engineer"
American military researchers say they have unlocked the secret to regrowing limbs and recreating organs in humans who have sustained major injuries.

Using "nanoscaffolding," the researchers have regrown a man's fingertip and the internal organs of several test subjects.

The technology works by placing a very fine apparatus called a scaffold, which is made of polymer fibres hundreds of times finer than a human hair, in place of a missing limb or damaged organ. The scaffold acts as a guide for cells to grab onto so they can begin to rebuild missing bones and tissue. The tissue grows through tiny holes in the scaffold, in the same way a vine snakes its way up a trellis.

After the body part has regenerated, the scaffold breaks down, is absorbed into the person's body and disappears entirely.

The military plans to announce the breakthrough at the 26th Army Science Conference -- which attracts more than 1,600 international military scientists -- in Florida next month.

John Parmentola, director of research and laboratory management for the U.S. army, revealed some of the details of the announcement this week to a select group of bloggers and military observers on a conference call.

"There is a case of an individual who, with a model airplane, lost the tip of their finger," Parmentola told the group on the call. "And by the tip I mean the nail, the bone, the actual tip of their finger while they were starting up the airplane.

"That has been completely regrown . . . the nail, the bone, the tissue."

By using nanoscaffolding, the military was able to regrow the man's fingertip, restoring everything he had lost, much as some amphibians can regrow a leg or tail.

Parmentola said the military has been able to regrow "whole bladders" in people who have had bladder damage. The technology has also been used to repair the wall of a woman's uterus.

Several breakthroughs with nanoscaffolding preceded the U.S. army's stunning announcement. In June 2006, researchers from the University of Sheffield in England announced they had used nanoscaffolding to repair skin damage in people with third-degree burns.

Researchers attached a person's skin cells to a nanoscaffold, and the cells grew over it. The skin-covered scaffold was then placed over the wound, where it bonded with the patient's body. The scaffold then dissolved.

"Previous attempts to find better ways of encouraging skin cell growth have used chemical additives and other elaborate techniques to produce scaffolds, but their success has been limited," said Tony Ryan, a professor in the university's department of chemistry. "We've found that skin cells are actually very smart. It's in their DNA to sort themselves into the right arrangement. They just need a comparatively uncomplicated scaffold (and each other) to help them grow in a safe, natural way."

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Looks like they have already worked on this for a long time and is finally confident enough to tell the world about it. Good for the doctors and scientists working on this great achievement.

They'll probably need to share some of this technology with other doctors and scientists around the world (probably just to close allies) for good will. But how much will the share?

This will obviously be HUGE for veterans injured in the wars, and also to anyone who could use such a medical advancement.

What will the implication of this technology on other militaries around the world, such as China and Russia's where they might not be in the loop for technology transfer?

Such treatments also much be very expensive, so what do you think are the criterias that must be meet to get this treatment. Does the average GI Joe all get it? or only officers of a certain rank?

Personally, I can't see medical care providing this to all soldiers or civilians injured any time soon, perhaps in 10-20 years, but currently, they might be able to provide it to VIPs and the wealthy.

If countries considered non-friendly or at least not an ally, haven't started to research into this field already, they'll probably going to start throwing money into it if they haven't already.
 

Scratch

Captain
I actually think it won't be that expensive. But than again it depends on what properties the scaffolds must have precisely and how difficult these are to achieve. Producing really thin polymer fibres isn't really that big of a deal, is it?
I'm much more suprised really that the actual ability to regrow limbs generally exists and can be triggered "rather easy". Of course it also remains to be seen to what scale it will eantually work. Regrowing a fingertip with all the different parts is fascinating, but still it's only a fingertip, and far from a complete arm.
 

montyp165

Junior Member
This could be a revolutionary advance in treatment of trauma injuries for civilians as well as military, so I doubt this would remain bottled for long once perfected.
 

batskcab

New Member
I actually think it won't be that expensive. But than again it depends on what properties the scaffolds must have precisely and how difficult these are to achieve. Producing really thin polymer fibres isn't really that big of a deal, is it?
I'm much more suprised really that the actual ability to regrow limbs generally exists and can be triggered "rather easy". Of course it also remains to be seen to what scale it will eantually work. Regrowing a fingertip with all the different parts is fascinating, but still it's only a fingertip, and far from a complete arm.

Cost is associated with supply and demand. Diamond used to be pretty worthless not too long ago, now its a multi-million dollar rock. If they have a monopoly and reduce supply, or there being a high, and I'd imagine huge demand, costs will rise.

I think its a remarkable breakthrough, being able to regenerate is no longer science fiction, its only a matter of time.
 

ravenshield936

Banned Idiot
i wish anyone can have access to this technology
sth like this, like medical, should be without borders...ideally
but anyways with this, now they can consider options for many types of treatment
 

Mu Shu Tortilla

New Member
The idea was being pursued in the late 1990's by Advanced Tissue in La Jolla, California. They were selling skin that was grown from baby foreskins. One foreskin could generate 400 square feet of skin that could be grafted to any blood type. They were working on kidneys, livers and cartilage back then. Unfortunately their technology raised the ire of, to me badly misguided, medical "ethicists" who protested vociferously about them "playing God". They went out of business earlier this decade but as I suspected their ideas did not die with them.
 

ravenshield936

Banned Idiot
The idea was being pursued in the late 1990's by Advanced Tissue in La Jolla, California. They were selling skin that was grown from baby foreskins. One foreskin could generate 400 square feet of skin that could be grafted to any blood type. They were working on kidneys, livers and cartilage back then. Unfortunately their technology raised the ire of, to me badly misguided, medical "ethicists" who protested vociferously about them "playing God". They went out of business earlier this decade but as I suspected their ideas did not die with them.
they better not
such a technology is priceless
f*** playing god
only conservatives and diehard christians say those, and their closed minds are causing hundreds of thousands of deaths for people who can really use this to heal
 

chakos

New Member
VIP Professional
What makes us such a brilliant species is we actually can play god. I can see in the next few hundred years the human race beating every conceivable medical issue.. culminating in the ability to beat death itself. If only the religious fanatics dont do what they did in the middle ages and hold us back for the sake of a fairy tale.
 

In4ser

Junior Member
Sounds almost too good to be true, but if true it is excellent news indeed. Though I believe everything should be done with moderation though, not necessarily for religious reasons. Pushing the envelop to fast could have dire and unforeseen consequences.

Death itself is not necessarily a bad thing. It prevents overpopulation and exhaustion of resources. It also stimulates change in society and human progress.
 

Mu Shu Tortilla

New Member
they better not
such a technology is priceless
f*** playing god
only conservatives and diehard christians say those, and their closed minds are causing hundreds of thousands of deaths for people who can really use this to heal

San Diego County is the home of a "creation science" museum out near Lakeside. This is the county that elected Duncan Hunter and Randy Cunningham to Congress. Need I say more? :rofl:
 
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