Injectable mini-livers aim to boost liver function without surgery, MIT study finds

TL;DR Summary
MIT researchers demonstrated injectable hydrogel microspheres carrying hepatocytes form stable, vascularized “mini livers” in mice that survive and secrete liver proteins for about eight weeks, offering a non-surgical alternative or bridge to transplantation with ultrasound-guided delivery and monitoring; future work includes reducing immune rejection and extending duration.
Topics:health#hepatocytes#hydrogel-microspheres#liver-disease#regenerative-medicine#satellite-livers#technology
- Injectable “satellite livers” could offer an alternative to liver transplantation MIT News
- Hydrogel microspheres (IMAGE) EurekAlert!
- Injectable Backup Livers Could Help Thousands Too Sick for Transplant Surgery ScienceBlog.com
- Satellite Livers Instead Of Transplantation Science 2.0
- Injectable “Satellite Livers” Present Promising Alternative to Liver Transplantation bioengineer.org
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