Tissue Engineering And Nanotheranostics

(Steven Felgate) #1
b2815 Tissue Engineering and Nanotheranostics “9.61x6.69”

4 Tissue Engineering and Nanotheranostics

wound.^15 The immune cells recruit resident satellite cells (SCs) to


begin forming new myoblasts. The ideal healing resolution of remod-


eling the scar tissue, fusion of new myocytes, and reinnervation are


prevented in VML injuries due to the large amount of scar tissue.^15 As


a result, the scar remains intact and any tissue distal of the wound is


denervated.^15 Primary concerns in the clinical treatment of VML inju-


ries are wound closure, pain reduction, and promotion of healing. A


common surgical method to achieve these goals utilizes muscle flaps.^11


If the injury is small enough, a muscle flap can be cut in the nearby


muscle and repositioned in numerous ways to cover the wound.^16


Larger defects may require harvesting thin muscle grafts from a differ-


ent donor site.^16 This treatment provides the wound site with a cover-


ing to help protect the injury, preformed vasculature to ensure


adequate blood supply, and an additional source of cells for regenerat-


ing the lost muscle tissue.^16 Although this method is well established


and often effective for closing wounds, lack of suitable donor sites and


the necessity of causing another injury make it less than ideal. Skin


grafting procedures may also be necessary once the underlying muscle


damage has been addressed. When the wound is closed and has devel-


oped mechanical integrity, bracing and physical therapy can be used to


mitigate any resulting disability.^17 Cellular engineering strategies could


be applied to many of these problems, but the strategies used will be


dependent on the type of disease or injury. For example, VML may


eventually be treated by off-the-shelf muscle grafts engineered in vitro.


However, this technique will require surgery, and will likely not be


effective in systemic disorders such as DMD. Instead, dystrophies may


be addressed through a cell injection approach, conditioning and


expanding cells in vitro and injecting them into circulation to home in


on their target sites throughout the body. Current tissue engineering


approaches from 3D constructs to cell injection are discussed later


in this chapter.


2. New Muscle: Myogenesis and Muscle Regeneration


The body has a remarkable ability to not only structure its connective


tissues during embryogenesis, but also maintain and repair them as an


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