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Stem Cells Printer: What the New Innovation Means for Aesthetic Medicine

March 5, 2013 |

On February 5, 2013 Scientific American has published a report that the University of Edinburgh has successfully finished a study which led to the production of a live embryonic stem cells-discharging printer. The breakthrough printer releases uniformly-sized cell droplets such that the living cells could be used to mutate into a number of cell types.

A wide variety of possibilities are seen with the new, innovative printing method. In the beauty industry, for instance, the printer can be used for cosmetic procedures that address wrinkles, uneven skin tone, tired, aged skin, and even thinning hair.

“After a series of testing, improvements, and approvals, I hope this new technology might play a huge role in aesthetic medicine,” shares Dr. Simon Ourian, Medical Director of Epione Beverly Hills.

For transplants, drug effects testing, and study purposes, vital organs can be grown by these printer-produced, three-dimensional human cells. With its seemingly endless possibilities, the printer might even be used to print what have been dubbed as the building blocks of life directly into the human body.
Technically, stem cells are referred to as hESCs or human Embryonic Stem Cells. These cells are extracted directly from a human embryo, giving them the ability to grow into almost any form of cell found in individuals—from skin and bone, muscle, to brain tissue.

Read the News Release at http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/stem-cells-printer-what-the-new-innovation-means-for-aesthetic-medicine-216100.htm

Source:  SBWire at http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/stem-cells-printer-what-the-new-innovation-means-for-aesthetic-medicine-216100.htm

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