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In 2000, a new procedure for creating artificial bladders for humans was developed. This procedure is called an orthotopic neobladder procedure. This procedure involves shaping a part (usually 35 to 40 inches) of a patient's
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between the ages of four and nineteen who had been followed for up to five years after surgery to determine long-term effects. The bladders were prepared and the trial run by a team of biologists at the
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On
January 30, 1999, scientists announced that lab-grown bladders had been successfully transplanted into dogs. These artificial bladders worked well for almost a year in the dogs.
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to form a new bladder; however, these bladders made of intestinal tissues produced unpleasant side-effects. The current standard for repairing a damaged
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Artificial bladder being developed by James J. Yoo M.D., Ph.D.at the
Department of Urology at Harvard Medical School.
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The two main methods for replacing bladder function involve either redirecting urine flow or replacing the bladder
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In 2006, the first publication of experimental transplantation of bioengineered bladders appeared in
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involves partial or complete replacement using tissue from the small intestine.
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134:"Tissue-engineered autologous bladders for patients needing cystoplasty"
72:. Bioengineered organs which rely on a patient's own cells,
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Atala A, Bauer SB, Soker S, Yoo JJ, Retik AB (April 2006).
178:"Bladder tissue-engineering: a new practical solution?"
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62:Wake Forest University School of Medicine
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200:Doctors Create Re-Engineered Bladders
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212:- non-biological artificial bladder.
105:Urinary Reconstruction and Diversion
20:. Replacement can be done with an
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76:constructs, are not subject to
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151:10.1016/S0140-6736(06)68438-9
101:"Treatments & Procedures"
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66:Boston Children's Hospital
22:artificial urinary bladder
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78:transplant rejection
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231:Implants (medicine)
226:Artificial organs
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144:(9518): 1241–6.
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