Introduction: History of regenerative medicine

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Abstract

The majority of species on earth have the ability to regenerate body parts. Higher order mammals, including humans, have lost the ability to re-grow limbs and vital organs and have replaced tissue regeneration with the processes of inflammation and scar tissue formation (Metcalfe & Ferguson 2007). The human body does have the inherent ability, however, to regenerate selected cell populations and tissues on a routine basis: bone marrow, the liver, the epidermis, and the cells that constitute the intestinal lining among others. The dramatic idea that through medicine we may be able to minimize scar tissue formation and extend this regenerative capacity to all body parts has been an elusive dream since the times of Greek mythology when Prometheus was sentenced to eternal suffering as a bird ate his liver for eternity while the liver regenerated. It is fascinating to consider that even the Greeks seemed to predict the regenerative capacity of the liver. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2009.

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Badylak, S. F., Russell, A. J., & Santin, M. (2009). Introduction: History of regenerative medicine. Strategies in Regenerative Medicine: Integrating Biology with Materials Design. Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-74660-9_1

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