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" ... As 3D printing continues to mature, its practical uses are seemingly infinite. From artwork and toys to entire buildings and even transplantable organs, this technology can go as far as our imaginations will allow. ... "
" ... Companies like United Therapeutics are already helping to solve the acute issue of national shortage of transplantable lungs, as well as bioprinting organs such as heart, liver, and kidneys, Young said. ... "
" ... Currently, Rothblatt and her firm, United Therapeutics, are working to manufacture transplantable organs—hearts, lungs, kidneys and livers—for those whose lives depend on donors. The tragedy today is that donor organs are in woefully short supply, and most people who are on donor wait lists will die. ... "
" ... In 1998, I stood before an audience of health professionals at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, an elite medical center that typically ranks among the top ten in the nation in NIH research funding. I was invited to UAB to discuss an article I had recently written with Art Caplan in the New England Journal of Medicine, in which we argued for national sharing of transplantable organs like livers. As a physician trained in bioethics, I explained to the audience why I thought a person’s chance of living or dying should not depend on the arbitrariness of geography. Moreover, I informed the audience that livers could be flown across transplant regions with little decline in organ function. I saw no moral justification for local-priority allocation policies, saying something like: “When a donor organ becomes available in Tennessee or Alabama, it makes no sense to transplant it into a relatively healthy person nearby if someone in Pennsylvania or New York is in more urgent need.” ... "
" ... Researchers recognize that these are just the first steps on the road to bioprinting transplantable organs. Renard said that building tissues of larger mass will require the industry “to figure out the process of how to feed that tissue, and that becomes a process of introducing a vascular and capillary system.” WFIRM director Dr. Anthony Atala acknowledges that bioprinting organs for human use won’t happen anytime soon, but said that research is proceeding into printing increasingly complex structures: flat structures (like skin), tubular structures (like blood vessels), hollow structures (like the stomach or bladder), and finally the most complex organs (like the heart, liver and kidneys). ... "