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  • The regenerating bladder

    Posted by Leigh on September 21, 2009 at 10:23 pm

    I have just watched Dr Oz on Oprah and was amazed at the science subject of regeneration of organs.

    Medicine: The Regenerating Bladder http://www.Time.com

    For years, doctors have known that the urinary bladder, more than any other organ in the human body, possesses remarkable powers of regeneration, e.g., after removal of a diseased section, the bladder grows right over the incision to become intact.

    But until recently doctors did not know how to take complete advantage of this unique power. Compared with other more complex organs, the bladder has a relatively simple structure and function. It is a remarkably elastic, muscular sac lying in the pelvic cavity. It receives urine from the kidneys through two slender tubes called ureters, expands to pint or even quart size as it stores urine, then contracts and discharges it from the body through a third tube called a urethra.

    People with no bladders, or with diseased bladders, usually live in great discomfort and with considerable danger of serious kidney infection.

    Temporary Short Cut. B.C.M., a 50-year-old office manager, was a case in point. When he entered Detroit’s Henry Ford Hospital, he had drained his bladder through artificial tubes for 27 years, suffered almost constant pain from chronic ulcers of the bladder.

    This week B.C.M. was ready to leave the hospital with a bladder as new as an infant’s, as the result of a remarkable operation that causes the patient to grow a completely new bladder after the old one has been removed.

    In 1950 three surgeons—Dr. Arthur Waite Bohne, chief of the Department of Urology at Ford, Dr. Paul Jackson Hettle of his staff, and Dr. Robert Wallace Osborn—began experimenting on dogs, succeeded in regenerating completely removed bladders by introducing a plastic mold around which a new bladder could grow.

    The technique worked so well that they decided to try it on humans.Instead of a mold, which has to be removed in a second operation, the doctors used a three-by-four-inch. egg-shaped plastic bag. They removed B.C.M.’s diseased bladder, severing the ureters and the urethra where they entered the bladder, and put the inflated bag in its place. A Y-shaped tube ran through the bag. Its two arms were inserted through the dangling ureters to the kidneys and its trunk was passed through the urethra and outside the body through an incision (necessary only in males). This short cut from the kidneys permitted B.C.M. to live without a bladder while a new one was growing.

    New Tissue. From their previous experiments and from X rays, the doctors charted the growth of the regenerating organ. Almost immediately after B.C.M. was sewed up, his body began reacting, building up a thick-walled pouch around the plastic bag. In 30 to 50 days, the pouch had completed the first of three distinct layers of tissue, and at the end of 90 days the smooth muscle tissue that discharges the bladder at will had been formed. Meanwhile, the pouch had adhered to the surrounding body tissues and to the severed ends of the ureters and urethra.

    B.C.M. now had a perfectly healthy (although slightly smaller) new bladder. The plastic bag was deflated and, with its tubes, pulled out through the urethra and the incision without further surgery. Since the operation had not touched the small sphincter muscle that opens and closes the entrance to the urethra, the patient had no difficulty in controlling his new bladder.

    New Strength. The origin of the regenerated tissue posed an interesting question. Some layers were probably the result of the body’s normal healing process, and others may have been formed from blood cells; connective tissue undoubtedly was formed from the ureters and urethra. But the appearance of smooth muscle in the pouch was, in the words of the doctors, “more difficult to rationalize”

    : true regeneration of smooth muscle has been observed only in rare situations, and mostly in animals. After considering several possible sources, doctors could only conclude that the smooth muscle in the new bladder may somehow have been formed from the primitive connective tissue.

    Patients who need new bladders are not likely to worry much where they come from. The new operation spells hope for thousands afflicted with such common bladder ailments as cancer or chronic ulcers. “It’s by no means a panacea for everybody with bladder trouble,” says Dr. Bohne. “But the new procedure will replace the reservoir and will, we believe, prevent the kidneys from becoming infected, a result that frequently caused untimely deaths after the older method of radical surgery and the insertion of permanent catheters [artificial drainage tubes] into the kidneys. And if, for example, we can eradicate a cancer that is causing trouble, we’re giving the patient a better chance of survival.”


    Leigh, 39
    Dx July 2007
    TURBT July 2007
    RC/Neobladder ,Studer Pouch, September 2007
    Erasmus Centrum Rotterdam
    TNM Classification: pT4 N2 Mo
    4 cycles aduvant chemo Gemzar & Cisplatinum
    Leigh replied 15 years, 5 months ago 6 Members · 6 Replies
  • 6 Replies
  • leigh's avatar

    leigh

    Member
    September 23, 2009 at 8:47 pm

    that would be really cool, growing it around our neo’s and a little helping hand of a muscle would be great. :laugh:


    Leigh, 39
    Dx July 2007
    TURBT July 2007
    RC/Neobladder ,Studer Pouch, September 2007
    Erasmus Centrum Rotterdam
    TNM Classification: pT4 N2 Mo
    4 cycles aduvant chemo Gemzar & Cisplatinum
  • mmc's avatar

    mmc

    Member
    September 23, 2009 at 5:00 pm

    that would be cool!
    Wonder if they can grow one around a neobladder?

    Having a muscle to do the squeezing would be nice!

    Mike


    Age 54
    10/31/06 dx CIS (TisG3) non-invasive (at 47)
    9/19/08 TURB/TUIP dx Invasive T2G3
    10/8/08 RC neobladder(at 49)
    2/15/13 T4G3N3M1 distant metastases(at 53)
    9/2013 finished chemo -cancer free again
    1/2014 ct scan results….distant mets
    2/2014 ct result…spread to liver, kidneys, and lymph system

    My opinions are my own and do not reflect the opinion of ABLCS or anyone else. I am not a doctor nor do I play one on TV.
  • gracie's avatar

    gracie

    Member
    September 23, 2009 at 4:22 pm

    I saw a news report that stated that bladders could be grown using stem cells – not the cells from the (diseased) bladder.

    The bladder was specifically mentioned since it is so easy to grow and is not a ‘complicated’ organ .

    The last eight political years have not been kind to advancements in medicine/science. With the new administration there is renewed focus on stem cell research again. What a miracle this could be!

    Gracie

  • flamenco's avatar

    flamenco

    Member
    September 23, 2009 at 11:53 am

    Intriguing article, but I am a bit confused about the time scale – it says the research was started in 1950 ? So I am presuming this new “human” bladder was grown recently and if so, why such a long time before the technique was tried, maybe advances in the surgical skills ?
    Like you, Pat, I would be concerned about the idea of regrowing a new bladder, when certainly the genetic building blocks might be suspect.
    Diane

  • 's avatar

    Guest
    September 22, 2009 at 3:43 am

    Well i’ll withhold my opinion until they actually do this on a bladder cancer patient. The conditions that produced the diseased bladder would still be a component of the genes and one would wonder if those pre-existing conditions still remained.?????
    Pat

  • webs's avatar

    webs

    Member
    September 21, 2009 at 11:22 pm

    Wow! :blink: :woohoo: :silly: Guess it is to late for us :dry: but think what this could mean for the future.

    Webs

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