Abstract
“Cryopreservation” is sometimes said to provide “viable” tissue – the terms have even been used as synonyms [1]. But the fact is that a cryopreservation method that is effective for one tissue may not be effective for another and even if reasonably effective it may not necessarily produce fully functional, living tissue – some cells may have been destroyed. One sometimes encounters the oxymoron “preservation injury” but surely, “preservation” and “injury” are mutually exclusive. And what does the term “viability” mean in a scientific context? The situation is complicated but at least some of the confusion may be resolved if we can define some of these terms.
Keywords
- Human Cord Blood
- Cord Blood Stem Cell
- Haemopoietic Stem Cell
- Cryoprotective Agent
- Cryopreservation Method
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
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Acknowledgments
This chapter draws on material previously published by the author in the BBTS Newsletter No 42 (Autumn 1996) and in an article “The preservation of tissues for transplantation.” Published in Cell and Tissue Banking, 7, 349–358 (2006).
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Pegg, D. (2010). Cryopreservation. In: Galea, G. (eds) Essentials of Tissue Banking. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9142-0_8
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