Man Grows New Nose In His Arm
A businessman who lost his nose to skin cancer is having a new one grown in his arm using stem cells, in a pioneering procedure.
Experts at University College London say the new nose will look 
exactly the same as the man’s original one, and hope it will even have a
 sense of smell.
The trial marks the first time a full nose has been grown from 
scratch, and could in future be used as a therapy for patients such as 
soldiers and car crash victims, the Daily Mail reported.
The first stage of the process was to create a glass mould of the 
unnamed man’s nose, and to spray it with a honeycomb-like material to 
form a biological scaffold for new cells to attach themselves to.
Once the scaffold had been built, the glass mould was removed and the
 biological frame was coated with millions of stem cells which can be 
coaxed into forming cartilage using chemicals.
At the same time, researchers inserted a small balloon beneath the 
surface of the man’s arm and gradually inflated it to stretch the skin, 
making it loose enough to accommodate the new nose.
Professor Alex Seifalian, who is leading the experiment, said the 
man’s nose has been designed to look exactly like the original – 
slightly crooked.
He told BBC Focus magazine: “His nose was a little bit bent to the 
left and we asked if he wanted it straight but he said no, he wanted it 
exactly the same.”
 

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