“…In this technique, the engineered tissue is placed inside the host, and essentially employs the host as the 'bioreactor' to develop the vascular supply in the engineered tissue, with the potential to then move the engineered tissue to a more permanent location. The most common method of in vivo conditioning is to create an arteriovenous (AV) loop ( colour Plate XXIII ) in which a vascular graft is surgically inserted as a bypass (or loop) from a small artery to a nearby venule (Mian et al , 2000;Kneser et al , 2006;Lokmic et al , 2007;Manasseri et al , 2007;Morritt et al , 2007;Ren et al , 2008;Dong et al , 2010;Beier et al , 2011;Boos et al , 2013). Within the space created by the loop, a tissue engineered construct is placed, and small vessels can sprout from the AV loop and enter the engineered tissue to provide nutrients and remove waste products.…”