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New book! Peripheral Nerve Tissue Engineering and Regeneration
The complete first edition of this living reference work is now available online and in print, providing a comprehensive overview of key concepts and…
Read moreWe are delighted to announce that a team led by James Phillips (UCL School of Pharmacy) was recently awarded the 2018 UCL Rosetrees Stoneygate Prize for research into improving nerve grafting using biomaterials.
The award will provide £250,000 over three years and aims to stimulate interdisciplinary research for the benefit of human health.
This cross-faculty research team includes Rebecca Shipley, (UCL Mechanical Engineering, UCL Institute of Healthcare Engineering), Ashleigh Boyd (UCL Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, UCL Institute of Immunity & Transplantation), Victoria Roberton (UCL School of Pharmacy) and Gareth Williams (UCL School of Pharmacy). The team work together within the UCL Centre for Nerve Engineering, a centre to engineer solutions to clinical nerve repair problems led by co-Directors James Phillips and Rebecca Shipley.
This new project looks at a new way of repairing serious peripheral nerve injuries where a gap in the nerve needs to be bridged. Currently, the best way of doing this is with an autograft – a graft of tissue from one part to another part of a person’s body. Unfortunately, this can result in painful complications for the patient and there is limited tissue available. The team will use a multi-disciplinary approach to develop alternatives to nerve autografts in order to improve outcomes without side effects.
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