reviewJournal of Bone and Joint SurgeryJul 1, 2004Closed access

ENGINEERING PRINCIPLES OF CLINICAL CELL-BASED TISSUE ENGINEERING

Cleveland Clinic · Cleveland Foundation

PubMed
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Abstract

Tissue engineering is a rapidly evolving discipline that seeks to repair, replace, or regenerate specific tissues or organs by translating fundamental knowledge in physics, chemistry, and biology into practical and effective materials, devices, systems, and clinical strategies. Stem cells and progenitors that are capable of forming new tissue with one or more connective tissue phenotypes are available from many adult tissues and are defined as connective tissue progenitors. There are four major cell-based tissue-engineering strategies: (1) targeting local connective tissue progenitors where new tissue is desired, (2) transplanting autogenous connective tissue progenitors, (3) transplanting culture-expanded or…

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874
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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Tissue engineering
  • Progenitor cell
  • Stem cell
  • Cell biology
  • Connective tissue
  • Regenerative medicine
  • Biology
  • Biomedical engineering
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