Soon, it would be possible to grow replacements for virtually any part of the human body.

They have already grown the bladder, urethra and windpipe, which have been implanted into patients during clinical trials.
Now scientists have set their sights on replicating more complicated organs, including the heart, kidneys, liver, pancreas and thymus.
The advances could extend life expectancy and cut waiting times for transplants, reported the Sunday Times.
The developments were detailed at a conference on 'rejuvenation technologies' at Cambridge University.
Professor Paolo Macchiarini, of the Karolinska institute in Sweden, said how he implanted a laboratory-grown windpipe into a man sticken by throat cancer.t had been created by using an artificial 'scaffold' designed in the shape of a windpipe, which was implanted with the patient's stem cells.
Professor Doris Taylor of Minnesota University has already created a beating human heart by stripping dead cells from a donor organ and reseeding it with live ones.
Source-ANI
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