The bank will also cooperate with individuals, organizations and other tissue banks around the world for the purpose of medical treatment, training and research.
The establishment of the tissue bank is a significant medical development, according to Dr. Tran Binh Giang. |
To date, it has preserved nearly 1,000 skull fragments, heart valves, sinews, and blood vessels.
The establishment of the bank was significant to the health sector which “can now save more lives and rehabilitate functions of the body organs,” said Dr. Giang, citing that there are currently over 300 tissue banks in 46 countries all over the world. Before the opening of the tissue bank, Vietnam had only two labs – in Hanoi Medical University and Pham Ngoc Thach Medical University which specialized in storing human tissue, according to Dr. Giang.
As a leading surgical hospital in Vietnam, Viet Duc conducts some 68,000 surgeries each year. From these surgeries, many organs and tissue from cases of brain death or loss of limbs were earlier donated but could not be stored due to the unavailability of a tissue bank.
“The opening of the bank thus can take advantage of Viet Duc Hospital which very few hospitals in the world have,” Dr. Giang said.
“Apart from tissue storage and transplantation, the bank can preserve umbilical cord stem cells- the base for the production of stem cells in the future”, said Dr. Giang.
Cryopreservation equipment for conserving living tissue by cooling it to a very low temperature without causing ice crystals in freezing. |
The tissue bank is expected to become a leading research and practical training center for tissue preservation and stem cell transplantation, as well as transferring technology to other tissue banks which are to be set up in the future.