Vascularization in Bone Tissue Engineering: Physiology, Current Strategies, Major Hurdles and Future Challenges — Marina I. Santos (2009) | RDL Network
The lack of a functional vascular supply has, to a large extent, hampered the whole range of clinical applications of 'successful' laboratory-based bone tissue engineering strategies. To the present, grafts have been dependent on post-implant vascularization, which jeopardizes graft integration and often leads to its failure. For this reason, the development of strategies that could effectively induce the establishment of a microcirculation in the engineered constructs has become a major goal for the tissue engineering research community. This review addresses the role and importance of the development of a vascular network in bone tissue engineering and provides an overview of the most up to date research efforts to develop such a network.
Sabine Fuchs, Shahram Ghanaati, Carina Orth, Mike Barbeck, M. Kolbe, Alexander Hofmann, Markus Eblenkamp, Manuela E. Gomes, Rui L Reis, C. James Kirkpatrick
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