A breakthrough study reveals how shifting the body’s healing response could help regenerate tissue instead of forming scars.
Researchers say that, using a patient’s own blood or donor blood, the technique could help control severe bleeding and improve treatment for people with clotting disorders.
Scientists have succeeded in regenerating bone, cartilage, and muscle using stem cells, marking advancement toward practical ...
When a traumatic injury occurs to an artery, if a patient’s own veins aren't available for use as a bypass graft, they’ll typically have to be treated either with a synthetic implant or with surgical ...
New research from Stanford, Texas A&M, and Wake Forest has revealed biological and genetic mechanisms that allow mammals, ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Prof. Dekel wears many hats as a physician-scientist. (photo credit: SHEBA MEDICAL CENTER) Prof. Benjamin Dekel on growing hope ...
A two-step treatment redirects healing from scarring to regeneration, enabling regrowth of bone, ligaments, and joints, and ...
WINSTON-SALEM – Human organ transplants became possible in 1954 when a kidney became the first organ to be transplanted successfully, eventually earning Boston physician Joseph Murray the Nobel Prize.
The global tissue engineering market is driven by increasing demand for regenerative therapies, advancements in biomaterials and stem cell research, and rising applications in orthopedics and wound ...
Researchers at Texas A&M University have developed a two-step process that stimulates regeneration of bone, joint structures, and ligaments in mammals, challenging the belief that such regeneration is ...