Abstract

Tissue engineering (TE) is a concept that was first emerged in the early 1990s to provide solutions to severe injured tissues and/or organs [1]. The dream was to be able to restore and replace the damaged tissue with an engineered version which would ultimately help overcome problems such as donor shortages, graft rejections, and inflammatory responses following transplantation. While an incredible amount of progress has been made, suggesting that TE concept is viable, we are still not able to overcome major obstacles. In TE, there are two main strategies that researchers have adopted: (1) cell-based, where cells are been manipulated to create their own environment before transplanted to the host, and (2) scaffold-based, where an extracellular matrix is created to mimic in vivo structures. TE approaches for ocular tissues are available and have indeed come a long way, over the last decades; however more clinically relevant ocular tissue substitutes are needed. Figure 1 highlights the importance of TE in ocular applications and indicates the avenues available based on each tissue.[...].

Highlights

  • Tissue engineering (TE) is a concept that was first emerged in the early 1990s to provide solutions to severe injured tissues and/or organs [1]

  • TE approaches for ocular tissues are available and have come a long way, over the last decades; more clinically relevant ocular tissue substitutes are needed

  • posterior capsule opacification (PCO) occurs because lens epithelial cells remaining after cataract surgery have grown on the capsule causing it to become hazy and opaque [1,7,8]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Tissue engineering (TE) is a concept that was first emerged in the early 1990s to provide solutions to severe injured tissues and/or organs [1]. The dream was to be able to restore and replace the damaged tissue with an engineered version which would help overcome problems such as donor shortages, graft rejections, and inflammatory responses following transplantation. Corneal transplantation is currently the only surgical procedure for replacing damaged or diseased corneas. While the surgical procedure has been somewhat successful, major problems remain including donor corneas shortage, risks of infection, and graft rejection.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call