You can view the current or previous issues of Diabetes Health online, in their entirety, anytime you want.
Click Here To View
See if you qualify for our free healthcare professional magazines. Click here to start your application for Pre-Diabetes Health, Diabetes Health Pharmacist and Diabetes Health Professional.
Latest Diabetes Articles
Popular Diabetes Articles
Highly Recommended Diabetes Articles
The Brave New World of Transplants
What is on the horizon in organ transplants? Will hearts, livers, pancreases and kidneys be grown in a laboratory? Not in the near future, but doctors at Harvard have used cells from animal fetuses to produce new bladders and windpipes for sheep.
What is more feasible is the possibility of partial organs doing some of the essential functions of entire organs, says P. R. Rajagopalam, MD, director of transplantation at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.
"That is very promising, but to grow an entire heart or liver, that's somewhat distant," Rajagopalam says. What he finds more encouraging is a possible interim step - using clusters of cells from organs instead of whole organs.
If there is liver failure, a cluster of liver cells could be grown outside the body or even implanted in the body to take over some of those organ's functions and used as a substitute for a whole liver.
In the same manner, when diabetes results from an improperly working pancreas, cells from the pancreas could produce insulin to keep diabetes in check.
The production of such cluster cells is "very near, within a few years, but it's a question of quantity," Rajagopalam says.
Organ production is not considered as ethically controversial as cloning, but there could be controversy over using fetal tissue cells for research.
Rajagopalam made his predictions about using cluster cells instead of entire organs a few days after Harvard University researchers revealed that they had grown animal tissue from a variety of organs, including the heart, kidneys and bladder.
Categories: Diabetes, Heart Care & Heart Disease, Insulin, Islet & Pancreas Transplant
0 comments -
Oct 1, 1997
Diabetes Health is the essential resource for people living with diabetes- both newly diagnosed and experienced as well as the professionals who care for them. We provide balanced expert news and information on living healthfully with diabetes. Each issue includes cutting-edge editorial coverage of new products, research, treatment options, and meaningful lifestyle issues.




Email to a Friend
Send a link to this page to your friends and colleagues.