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Sarah Parsons

Scientists Grow Human Bones from Liposuctioned Fat

by , 03/30/10

growing bones from stem cells, Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic, stem cell research, Columbia University, bioreactor, design for health, titanium bone implants, bone grafts, growing bones from fat, growing bones from bone marrow, lab-grown bones

Growing plants can be tricky enough, but growing bones seems altogether impossible. Yet that’s exactly what scientists at Columbia University recently accomplished. A group led by Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic recently used stem cells and liposuctioned fat to grow — yes, grow – actual human bones. Once the process is perfected, it could eliminate the need for titanium bone replacements and painful bone grafts.

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4 Responses to “Scientists Grow Human Bones from Liposuctioned Fat”

  1. owen66 owen66 says:

    great time to be alive.

  2. ville ville says:

    this takes “big boned” to a Whole…….notha…….leva……

  3. [...] of collagen, blood vessels and airways in place. Immature animal cells were used to “grow” the lungs that were then attached to the [...]

  4. feline74 feline74 says:

    Wow. A joint replacement made out of your own bone.

    None too soon since metal-on-metal hip replacements are being un-recommended.

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