Australian bid to 'regrow' breasts after cancer surgeryAustralian scientists said they were to trial a revolutionary treatment which would allow women to regrow Re`grow´ v. i. & t. 1. To grow again. The snail had power to regrow them all [horns, tongue, etc.] - A. B. Buckley. Verb 1. their breasts after cancer surgery. Doctors from Melbourne's Bernard O'Brien Institute of Microsurgery microsurgery or micromanipulation Surgical technique for operating on minute structures, with specialized, tiny precision instruments under observation through a microscope, sometimes equipped with cameras to show the operation on a monitor. said they had developed an implantable device that uses a woman's own fat cells to grow back breasts following a mastectomy mastectomy (măstĕk`təmē), surgical removal of breast tissue, usually done as treatment for breast cancer. There are many types of mastectomy. In general, the farther the cancer has spread, the more tissue is taken. . "There is a dollop of fat that is put inside a device, a chamber, fed with the blood supply and then this dollop of fat will grow into the space and essentially feel normal to the patient," said lead researcher Phillip Marzella. Resembling a perforated brassiere cup, Marzella said the chamber would eventually fill with fat as the initial deposit expands because "nature abhors a vacuum". Initial participants would have to undergo a second operation to remove the chamber, but he said a biodegradable version that would dissolve within weeks was planned. "In terms of the breast certainly I think this is the first time it has been done in the world using this technology," Marzella told AFP (1) (AppleTalk Filing Protocol) The file sharing protocol used in an AppleTalk network. In order for non-Apple networks to access data in an AppleShare server, their protocols must translate into the AFP language. See file sharing protocol. . "Certainly there's work that has been done using stem cells but this is a completely different device that uses the patient's own blood supply." Trials on pigs had proved "very successful" and the question was whether the human body could grow fat in the breast area, he said. The hospital, which received a three million dollar (2.8 million US) government research grant, had been given human ethics clearance and the first human trials will begin early next year, he added. Breast cancer is the most common form of the disease among women worldwide and the leading cause of female cancer fatalities.
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