Abstract

Tissue engineering is an interdisciplinary field promising new therapeutic means for replacing lost or severely damaged tissues or organs. However, the fabrication of complex engineered tissues has been hampered due to the lack of vascularization to provide sufficient blood supply after implantation. In this article, we propose using rapid prototyping technology to prefabricate a scaffold with an inside hollowed vascular system including an arterial end, a venous end and capillary networks between them. The scaffold will be ''printed'' layer by layer. When printing every layer, a ''low-melting point'' material will be used to form a blood vessel network and a tissue-specific material will be used outside it. Hereafter the 'low-melting point' material will be evacuated by vaporization to ensure a hollowed vessel network. Then the inside hollowed capillary network can be endothelialized by using autologous endothelial cells in a cycling bioreactor while the outside material can be embedded with tissue-special cells. In the end, the new vascularized autologous grafts could be transferred to the defect site by using microsurgical techniques to connect the grafts with the host artery and vein. The strategy would facilitate construction of complex tissue engineering if the hypothesis proved to be practical.

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