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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

3D Bioprinting for Organ Regeneration

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TLDR
An overview of recent advances in 3D biop printing technology, as well as design concepts of bioinks suitable for the bioprinting process, focusing more specifically on vasculature, neural networks, the heart and liver are provided.
Abstract
Regenerative medicine holds the promise of engineering functional tissues or organs to heal or replace abnormal and necrotic tissues/organs, offering hope for filling the gap between organ shortage and transplantation needs. Three-dimensional (3D) bioprinting is evolving into an unparalleled biomanufacturing technology due to its high-integration potential for patient-specific designs, precise and rapid manufacturing capabilities with high resolution, and unprecedented versatility. It enables precise control over multiple compositions, spatial distributions, and architectural accuracy/complexity, therefore achieving effective recapitulation of microstructure, architecture, mechanical properties, and biological functions of target tissues and organs. Here we provide an overview of recent advances in 3D bioprinting technology, as well as design concepts of bioinks suitable for the bioprinting process. We focus on the applications of this technology for engineering living organs, focusing more specifically on vasculature, neural networks, the heart and liver. We conclude with current challenges and the technical perspective for further development of 3D organ bioprinting.

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Book ChapterDOI

Materials as Bioinks and Bioink Design

TL;DR: This chapter summarizes the major concepts and recent progress in the design and formulation of bioinks for 3D bioprinting and demonstrates how bioinks can be optimized and exploited to engineer native-like tissue constructs with spatially and temporally organized biochemical and biophysical cues and tissue-specific cell types.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bioprinting Scaffolds for Vascular Tissues and Tissue Vascularization

TL;DR: A brief review of scaffold bioprinting to create vascularized tissues, covering the key features of vascular systems, scaffold-based methods, and the materials and cell sources used is presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

A super low-cost bioprinter based on DVD-drive components and a raspberry pi as controller

TL;DR: This publication presents a super low-cost bioprinter based on DVD-drive components that can be built using tools and components easily accessible for engineers and students and with a budget of less than € 190.
Journal ArticleDOI

Process hybridization schemes for multiscale engineered tissue biofabrication.

TL;DR: This work discusses recent literature in this domain and attempts to equip the reader with the understanding of selecting appropriate processes that can harmonize toward creating engineered tissues with appropriate multiscale structure-function properties.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

3D bioprinting of tissues and organs

TL;DR: 3D bioprinting is being applied to regenerative medicine to address the need for tissues and organs suitable for transplantation and developing high-throughput 3D-bioprinted tissue models for research, drug discovery and toxicology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Basic and Therapeutic Aspects of Angiogenesis

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Some of the 'design principles' for recreating the interwoven set of biochemical and mechanical cues in the cellular microenvironment are discussed, and the methods for implementing them are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous liquid interface production of 3D objects

TL;DR: The continuous generation of monolithic polymeric parts up to tens of centimeters in size with feature resolution below 100 micrometers is demonstrated and critical control parameters are delineated and shown that complex solid parts can be drawn out of the resin at rates of hundreds of millimeters per hour.
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