Miniature Model to Study Human Wound Healing
Screenshot from video showing blood cells streaming through a "wound" and a clot forming. The red-stained cells are actually white blood cells. A green extracellular glue can be seen at the top of the wound; this is fibrin, which holds the clot together. Credit: Yumiko Sakurai, Emory/Georgia Tech.
Study in a Sentence: Biomedical engineers recently created a miniature device composed of blood vessels, a valve that induces a “wound,” and the flow of blood to recapitulate the wound healing process seen during injury in humans. They used the human-based system to understand the role of several key clotting factors for blood clot formation.
Healthy for Humans: The system helped the scientists to determine the defects causing excessive bleeding in hemophila A patients as well as to assess the specific effects of blood clotting drugs. Thus, the model can be used as a screening tool for drugs to modulate human wound healing, a diagnostic tool to identify patients with bleeding disorders, and a personalized medicine tool to determine the optimal individualized drug treatments to modulate clotting.
Redefining Research: Unlike previous models which only simulate one aspect of the wound healing process, this system reproduce all components of the human small blood vessel injury and repair process.
References
- Sakurai Y, Hardy ET, Ahn B, et al. A microengineered vascularized bleeding model that integrates the principal components of hemostasis. Nat Commun. 2018;9:509. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-02990-x
Bleeding device video