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Success! Functioning Anal Sphincter Grown in a Petri Dish

Researchers are growing replacement sphincters to treat fecal incontinence, showing promising results in mouse trials.

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Eyes

, sperm

, you name it: these days, chances are someone's cooking it up on a little slab of agar and gearing up to graft/sew/implant it in anything that comes near. Today's body part is the anal sphincter

, that handy little ring of muscle that maintains the separation between your insides and your outsides. Researchers grew them from cells

, implanted them in mice, and compared the new sphincters' function with the animals', ah, native orifices. And apparently, they were quite satisfactory. You young whippersnappers out there might not realize it, of course. But malfunctioning sphincters are a big, messy problem as you get older, and a lot of people suffering from fecal incontinence

(including women recovering from births, which can put everything down there out of whack) could benefit from this research. Right now, Depends or surgery with high rates of complication are what people with damaged ...

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