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'Grow
your own breasts'

A scientist has grown
breast tissue in the laboratory
Scientists
claim a laboratory breakthrough could make it possible for women to grow
their own breast implants.
At present,
women seeking breast enhancement have had to rely on artificial implants.
However,
there is growing evidence that these pose a significant risk to health
if they leak.
New
Scientist magazine reports that tissue engineer Kevin Cronin, of the Bernard
O'Brien Institute of Microsurgery in Melbourne, is working on a safer
alternative.
Dr
Cronin told a meeting of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons that
he has successfully grown breast and fat tissue in rats, mice and rabbits.
If
the technique works in people, it could be used for cosmetic surgery or
breast reconstruction after mastectomy.
Scientists
have previously carried out experiments on animals in which they have
grown tissue in the lab and transplanted back into the body.
Within
the body
However,
Dr Cronin actually grows the tissue within the body itself.
A "chamber"
containing a scaffold is implanted into the area where new tissue is needed.
Cells
from surrounding tissue then migrate into the chamber and form a three-dimensional
blob of tissue. Over time, the scaffold disintegrates.
Dr Cronin
says the key to the technique's success is a "vascular loop" in the chamber
that generates new blood vessels to supply the growing tissue.
But he won't reveal details about how it works or what it is made of until
a patent has been granted.
Cronin
has already grown fat and breast tissues in female mice by implanting
the chamber into their groin.
This
area is on the animals' "milk line", where the cells are pre-programmed
to form breast and fat tissue.
Growing
human breasts would involve a similar technique.
Problems
Mr Dai
Davis, a plastic surgeon from Stanford Hospital in London, says supplying
blood to the new tissue will be difficult.
He told
New Scientist: "We can move fat around [during breast enlargements], but
we can't always vascularise it - it calcifies or just disappears altogether."
Tissue
engineer Julia Polak from Imperial College School of Medicine in London
warned that the technique could be fraught with danger if used to re-build
the breasts of women who have had breast cancer.
| "This
technique could be wonderful news for women" |
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Christine
Williamson, Silicon Support UK
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"In the
case of someone who has already had breast cancer, it would be difficult
to ensure that the cells used to regenerate the breast tissue did not
also contain the cancer-causing genetic machinery."
However,
she said the technique did have potential. "It is certainly exciting.
It is
the way tissue engineering should be going - getting the body to regenerate
itself rather than trying to grow complex body parts in a test tube."
Christine
Williamson, head of the pressure group Silicon Support UK, said artificial
implants had ruined the health of many women.
She said
research from the US indicated that silicon implants increased the risk
of cancer, suicide and diseases of the connective tissue.
She told
BBC News Online: "This
technique could be wonderful news for women who have had a mastectomy
or problems with only one breast growing. It could save a lot of them
dying or becoming seriously ill.
"The
complications associated with artificial implants are now coming to light
as proper research is done for the first time.
Ms Williamson
said she would be happy to be the first human to test the technique.
BBC
News
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