Molly Stevens: A new way to grow bone
茉莉.史蒂文斯(Molly Stevens): 讓骨骼重生的新方法
Molly Stevens studies and creates new biomaterials that could be used to detect disease and repair bones and human tissue. Full bio
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and minimize our suffering.
生物材料實驗室的主持人,
materials in the body,
perform a mechanical function.
就是進行機械的功能;
very complex if we want to,
可以把這些材料做得很複雜,
used all over the world,
can be many different things,
different labs in the world,
different abilities to regenerate,
that we work on a lot in our lab.
an iliac crest harvest.
somewhere else in the body.
only so much you can take,
你能取出的骨骼很有限,
years after the operation.
for bone repair, of course,
典型的組織工程法
又回到典型的組織工程法,
harvest cells from the patient,
in really fancy chemistries,
令人眼花繚亂的化學物質
非常非常緊密的和
periosteum away from the bone.
跟帶有很多幹細胞的這層膜之間
針孔般的切口進入,
artificial in vivo bioreactor cavity
were interested in using this.
在身體裡、在胚胎裡的細胞
化學性質也不甚相同,
designing the materials.
about bone structure,
really beautifully organized.
that have that sort of structure,
this hybrid sort of material
would normally be really brittle,
are porous, and they have to be,
它們也必須如此,
as a slightly curved surface,
with slightly different dimensions
on in both of these areas.
cell trials going on worldwide,
非常多的幹細胞試驗,
ways to surround the cells.
這些細胞的有趣方法。
會對訊號做出很好的回應,
between themselves.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Molly Stevens - Biomaterials researcherMolly Stevens studies and creates new biomaterials that could be used to detect disease and repair bones and human tissue.
Why you should listen
At Imperial College London, Molly Stevens heads a highly multidisciplinary research group that designs bioactive materials for regenerative medicine and biosensing. It's fundamental science with an eye to practical applications as healthcare products.
Among the products from her lab: an engineered bone, cardiac tissue suitable for use in transplants, and disease-sensing nanoparticle aggregates that change color in the presence of even tiny quantities of cancer-related enzymes, making early sensing possible. As Stevens told The Lancet: "It's right down at the nanoscience level. It's really exciting stuff, but it actually results in something very tangibly useful."
Molly Stevens | Speaker | TED.com