Clinical tissue engineering center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Clinical Tissue Engineering Center is a collaborative partnership between The Cleveland Clinic[1], Case Western Reserve University[2], University Hospitals[3], NASA's Glenn Research Center[4] and the Ohio Supercomputer Center[5]. In addition, CTEC comprises numerous regional, national and international commercial partners. This unique collaboration was founded with a $4 million award under Ohio's Biomedical Research and Commercialization Partnership Program from the Third Frontier Project[6].

[edit] Mission Statement

CTEC's mission is to accelerate the rate at which new tissue engineering discoveries and inventions are generated and translated into new treatments, products, companies and Ohio-based opportunities. CTEC investigators focus on translating tissue engineering strategies into methods, devices, diagnostic tools and therapeutics for the treatment of human disease.

[edit] Activities

CTEC is focused on the translation of basic research and innovation into new therapies and products for the advancement of clinical care. CTEC pairs researchers who are working on new materials and scaffolds, new cell sources, processing methods, new measurement tools and new means of intervention, with innovative clinicians who are inspired by the needs and opportunities for the treatment of diseases of the cartilage, bones, muscles and connective tissue.

This community of clinicians, scientists and strategic commercial partners is uniquely positioned to leverage the extensive resources generated by our partnering institutions and internationally recognized programs in Biomedical Engineering, the Cleveland Clinic Orthopaedic Research Center[7], and the Center for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine[8].

[edit] External links