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In the future, stem-cell-based assays and assays based on the use of engineered heart tissue could be used.
This definition was used because within a patient target tissue could be obtained unintentionally when trying to puncture another organ but missed when intending to puncture that organ, e.g. heart tissue could be present on the slide that should contain left lung but not present on the slide that should contain heart tissue.
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But older people who receive heart valves, veins or other soft tissue could be getting sick from implants, he said, with their doctors failing to make the connection because the patients tend to be frail and ill.
If animal trials scheduled for later this year prove successful, replacement tissue could be used in transplants for the hundreds of thousands of people suffering from heart disease within three years.
But not all the scar tissue could be cut away.
High uptake in localized areas (e.g., liver, heart, and inflammatory tissues) could be present in regions adjacent to the lesion.
In addition to a possible therapy for patients with heart disease, Bursac said that engineered heart tissues could also be used to effectively screen new drugs or therapies.
Devices made of heart tissue could screen drug candidates and be used to power implantable robots.
It has also been suggested that the increased TIMP-4 expression in normal heart tissue could explain why myocardial tumors are so rare [ 14].
To obtain heart cells of a more mature phenotype, the generation of three-dimensional (3D) so-called engineered heart tissue (EHT) could be an option.
Heart valve tissue engineering could be a possible solution for the limitations of mechanical and biological prostheses, which are commonly used for heart valve replacement.
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