J P Vacanti
Overview
Explore the profile of J P Vacanti including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
Author names and details appear as published. Due to indexing inconsistencies, multiple individuals may share a name, and a single author may have variations. MedLuna displays this data as publicly available, without modification or verification
Snapshot
Snapshot
Articles
185
Citations
6277
Followers
0
Related Specialties
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Published In
Affiliations
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
Vacanti C, Vacanti J
Surg Technol Int
. 2017 Jun;
I:43-49.
PMID: 28581583
Functional failure of one vital organ results in death. The surgical implantation of tissue with the capacity to replace lost organ function, from one individual into another, is termed transplantation....
2.
Hoganson D, Meppelink A, Hinkel C, Goldman S, Liu X, Nunley R, et al.
J Biomed Mater Res A
. 2013 Sep;
102(8):2875-83.
PMID: 24027176
Mesenchymal bone marrow stromal cells may be a source of cells to preseed decellularized biologic mesh materials for improved cellularization and promote a more physiologic tissue after remodeling. Spontaneous differentiation...
3.
4.
Kim S, Utsunomiya H, Vacanti J
Methods Mol Med
. 2011 Mar;
18:433-45.
PMID: 21370194
There have been many major advances in the field of liver transplantation in the past 30 yr. Orthotopic liver transplantation is currently the only established successful treatment for end-stage liver...
5.
Kim W, Vacanti J, Mooney D, Upton J, Ibarra C, Vacanti C
Tissue Eng
. 2009 Nov;
2(1):75-81.
PMID: 19877953
Little is known about the survival and function of chondrocytes when stored as a suspension at different temperatures. We compared the functional viability of chondrocytes stored in suspension at room...
6.
Langer R, Vacanti J, Vacanti C, Atala A, Freed L, Vunjak-Novakovic G
Tissue Eng
. 2009 Nov;
1(2):151-61.
PMID: 19877924
This paper discusses a novel approach to tissue engineering involving seeding mammalian cells onto biodegradable polymer scaffolds, growing the cells on these scaffolds in vitro, and then implanting the cell-polymer...
7.
Mooney D, Breuer C, McNamara K, Vacanti J, Langer R
Tissue Eng
. 2009 Nov;
1(2):107-18.
PMID: 19877920
Polymers of lactic and glycolic acid are attractive candidates to fabricate devides to transplant cells and engineer new tissues. These polymers are biocompatible, and exhibit a wide range of erosion...
8.
Vacanti C, Kim W, Upton J, Mooney D, Vacanti J
Tissue Eng
. 2009 Nov;
1(3):301-8.
PMID: 19877908
We studied the efficacy of tissue generated from polymers seeded with periosteal cells and compared it to that of polymers seeded with chondrocytes, for its ability to repair surgically created...
9.
Takeda T, Murphy S, Uyama S, Organ G, Schloo B, Vacanti J
Tissue Eng
. 2009 Nov;
1(3):253-62.
PMID: 19877904
Hepatocyte transplantation shows promise as therapy to support liver function. We have shown that hepatocytes can be transplanted into prevascularized synthetic polymers in rat models. While there are many studies...
10.
Takeda T, Vacanti J
Tissue Eng
. 2009 Nov;
1(4):355-60.
PMID: 19877899
Hepatocyte transplantation shows promise as a therapy to support liver function. We have previously shown that hepatocytes can be transplanted into prevascularized synthetic polymers in rat and pig models. This...