If there ’s one thing a lapin needs , it ’s well - function private parts . Scientists have successfully regrown rabbit ’ damaged penises , letting these rabbits do what cony do best . And their inquiry could have important implication for father human tissues as well .
In the new issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , a squad from Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center ’s Institute for Regenerative Medicine will detail their findings in penile tissue paper positive feedback . Using twelve New Zealand White rabbits with damaged penises , the squad engineered alternate tissues using each rabbit ’s own cavernous tissues . They then injected these permutation cellphone into scaffold made from lapin penises that had been stripped of their cells ; the scaffold act as support for the developing cells . The scaffolds were then implanted in the rabbits , after which the organized tissues began to form .
Once the penis were fully formed , the lapin were just as sexually combat-ready as rabbits with non - reconstructed crotch , twin with female rabbits within a moment of intro . The team also found that the cony ’ intimate performance was fully functional , and several female rabbit became pregnant and produce respectable progeny as a result of the face-off .

Anthony Atala , director of Wake Forest University Baptist , believes that the same technique can be applied to human males who have cavernous cells , but have damaged or contort penises — as well as men calculate to upgrade their current equipment . The process credibly would n’t postulate scaffolding from another penis , however . Researchers are currently looking into printable structures made from collagen and other materials .
Artificial Penis Tissue Proves Promising in Lab Tests[LiveScience ]
RegenerationScience

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