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Novel Blood-Based Graft Enables Simultaneous Muscle and Blood Vessel Regeneration
Published in April 2026 issue of Advanced Materials, this breakthrough platform uses patient’s own blood to treat severe muscle injuries.
Abstract
A research team, affiliated with UNIST has reported a new tissue engineering approach that regenerates muscle and blood vessels at the same time, using only the patient's blood. This technology offers a promising solution for treating extensive muscle loss caused by trauma or surgery.
Led by Professor Joo H. Kang of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at UNIST, the team collaborated with Professor Yoonhee Jin from Yonsei University to create a platform called SPARC (spatio-chimeric, plasma-based, shear-responsive construct). Using microfluidics, they assemble fibrin—an essential protein involved in blood clotting—into a structured scaffold. By applying controlled shear stress within tiny channels, they align fibrin fibers in specific patterns. Dense, stiff regions support muscle cell growth, while softer areas promote blood vessel formation. The result is a single, integrated scaffold that guides both tissues to develop side by side.
In tests on mice with large muscle wounds, the grafts successfully connected with the host's blood supply, encouraging the formation of new vasculature and muscle tissue. The animals regained strength and mobility, demonstrating the therapy's potential to restore function.

This approach is notable because it uses fibrin derived solely from the patient's blood, reducing the risk of immune rejection. It also simplifies scaffold fabrication by leveraging physical forces to create distinct microenvironments within one material.
“We harness fibrin's natural ability to organize under mechanical shear, creating a multifunctional scaffold from a single, biocompatible material,” said Professor Kang. “This technology could revolutionize treatments for severe muscle injuries and tissue defects.”
The findings of this research were published in the online edition of Advanced Materials on April 22, 2026. The study was supported by the Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT) and the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF).
Journal Reference
Su Hyun Jung, Minjun Kim, Da-Yoon Kim, et al., “Mechanically Spatio-Chimeric Fibrin Assembly Enables Vascular-Integrated Muscle Reconstruction for Volumetric Muscle Loss Repair,” Adv. Mater., (2026).
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