A method of forming and preserving a bioremodelable, biopolymer scaffold
material by subjecting animal tissue, particularly fetal or neo-natal
tissue, to chemical and mechanical processing. The process includes, but
is not limited to, harvesting the tissue, optionally extracting growth
and differentiation factors from the tissue, inactivating infective
agents of the tissue, mechanically expressing undesirable components from
the tissue, delipidizing the tissue, washing the tissue, optionally
drying the tissue, optionally cross-linking the tissue not necessarily in
the order described. The resulting product, EBM, is characterized by its
microbial, fungal, viral and prion inactivated state. EBM is strong,
bioremodelable, drapable and does not undergo calcification. EBM
supplants previous inventions because of its unique method of preparation
and broad applicability in tissue reengineering.