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Development of a Bioartificial Liver Using Isolated Hepatocytes
Author(s) -
Dixit Vivek
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
artificial organs
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.684
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1525-1594
pISSN - 0160-564X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1525-1594.1994.tb02219.x
Subject(s) - bioartificial liver device , extracorporeal , liver transplantation , fulminant hepatic failure , hepatocyte , liver disease , artificial liver , detoxification (alternative medicine) , liver failure , transplantation , medicine , biology , pathology , biochemistry , in vitro , alternative medicine
Severe liver disease is very often life‐threatening and dramatically diminishes quality of life. Liver support systems based on detoxification alone have been proved ineffective because they cannot correct biochemical disorders. An effective artificial liver support system should be capable of carrying out the liver's essential processes, such as synthetic and metabolic functions, detoxification, and excretion. It should be capable of sustaining patients with fulminant hepatic failure, preparing patients for liver transplantation when a donor liver is not readily available (i.e., bridge to transplantation), and improving the survival and quality of life for patients for whom transplantation is not a therapeutic option. Recent advances in cell biology, tissue culture techniques, and biotechnology have led the way for the potential use of isolated hepatocytes in treating an array of liver disorders. Isolated hepatocytes may be transplanted to replace liver‐specific deficiencies or as an important element of an auxiliary hybrid, bioartificial extracorporeal liver support device, which are important therapeutic applications for treating severe liver disease. Recently, several hepatocyte‐based liver support systems have been proposed. Although there is no current consensus on its eventual design configuration, the hollow fiber hepatocyte bioreactor shows the greatest promise. Furthermore, application of tissue engineering technology, based on cellsurface interaction studies proposed by our group and others, has enhanced interest in the development of highly efficient hybrid, bioartificial, liver support devices.