The impact of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) program on radiation and tissue banking in Thailand |
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Authors: | Yongyudh Vajaradul Jorge Morales Pedraza |
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Institution: | (1) Bangkok Biomaterial Centre, Faculty of Medicine, Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand;(2) TATB, Bangkok, Thailand;(3) Charagasse 3, Apart. 13, 10-30 Vienna, Austria |
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Abstract: | Tissue banking started in Thailand in 1979. Five years after this, the Bangkok Biomaterial Centre (BBC) was established in
the Faculty of Medicine, Siriraj Hospital, with the support of the IAEA program. The objective of the Centre was to provide
sterile bones and tissues for clinical use. Through the passage of time, the Bangkok Biomaterial Centre has gained confidence
from the end user and by 2007 has processed 33,872 allografts from 491 deceased donors and 4,035 live donors were used in
medical treatment in 3,596 patients in more than 79 different hospitals. More than 305 surgeons from Thailand used the tissue
produced in the BBC. At the beginning of its work the BBC concentrate its activities on the production of the following tissues:
freeze dried bone, freeze dried dura mater and freeze dried fascia lata. All of these tissues were sterilised using ethylene
oxide gas until the end of year 1984. Since 1985 the BBC sterilise tissue using ionising radiation. The BBC is now producing
deep-frozen; bone tendon, cartilage, trachea and soft tissue; freeze-dried; bone, fascia lata, dura mater, amniotic membrane,
bone hydroxyapatite, bone tablet and fresh preserved amniotic membrane
Yongyudh Vajaradul is a Founder of Bangkok Biomaterial Centre and also a President of TATB, Bangkok, Thailand.
Jorge Morales Pedraza is a former IAEA Interregional Project Manager, Vienna, Austria. |
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Keywords: | Thailand IAEA Tissue banking Tissue banks |
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