Scientists in Scotland are planning to test a new technique of knitting together torn knee tissue using stem cells in patients.
Scientists in Scotland are planning to test a new technique of "knitting together" torn knee tissue using stem cells in patients.
Professor Anthony Hollander said researchers hoped to mend torn knee cartilage, a common injury among young sportsmen and women.It is being believed that the technique could prevent patients suffering serious knee problems, including osteoarthritis, for years to come.
Speaking at a Scottish Stem Cell Network conference in Edinburgh yesterday, Hollander, a Bristol University researcher, told scientists about the work.
The trials include patient tests of a stem cell technique to mend tears in the part of the knee cartilage known as the meniscus.
Hollander told The Scotsman: "At the moment, there's no way to treat this (cartilage]. It is just cut out, and that leaves the patient very susceptible to osteoarthritis within a short number of years."
He said the technique involves implanting stem cells on a membrane into the middle of the lesion and sewing it up.
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The stem cells used will come from the patient's own bone marrow, reducing the chance of them being rejected.
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ARU/M