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Erratum : An Overview of Injectable Polymeric Hydrogels for Tissue Engineering

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TLDR
In this article, the authors provide an overview of the recent trends in the preparation of injectable hydrogels, along with key factors to be kept in balance for designing an effective injectable hyrogel system.
About
This article is published in European Polymer Journal.The article was published on 2016-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 229 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Self-healing hydrogels.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Injectable hydrogels for cartilage and bone tissue engineering.

TL;DR: The selection of appropriate biomaterials and fabrication methods to prepare novel injectable hydrogels for cartilage and bone tissue engineering are described and the biology of Cartilage and the bony ECM is summarized.
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Bioink properties before, during and after 3D bioprinting

TL;DR: Numerical approaches were reviewed and implemented for depicting the cellular mechanics within the hydrogel as well as for prediction of mechanical properties to achieve the desired hydrogels construct considering cell density, distribution and material-cell interaction.
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A review of the designs and prominent biomedical advances of natural and synthetic hydrogel formulations

TL;DR: This review critically detail the most common natural and synthetic hydrogel formulations, their designs and their most significant and current biomedical applications.
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Soft-Nanocomposites of Nanoparticles and Nanocarbons with Supramolecular and Polymer Gels and Their Applications.

TL;DR: This work reviews syntheses, properties, and applications of various gel-nanocomposites assembled from different metal-based nanoparticles or nanocarbons with tailor-made supramolecular (small molecular) or polymeric physical organogels and hydrogels and presents appropriate rationale to explain most of these phenomena at the molecular level.
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Crosslinking method of hyaluronic-based hydrogel for biomedical applications.

TL;DR: This review provides an overview of various methods of chemical and physical crosslinking using different linkers that have been investigated to develop the mechanical properties, biodegradation, and biocompatibility of hyaluronic acid as an injectable hydrogel in cell scaffolds, drug delivery systems, and wound healing applications.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hierarchical Design of Tissue Regenerative Constructs.

TL;DR: This review gives an overview of the essential components of tissue regenerating scaffolds, ranging from the molecular to the macroscopic scale in a hierarchical manner, and elaborates about recent pivotal technologies, such as photopatterning, electrospinning, 3D bioprinting, or the assembly of micrometer‐scale building blocks which enable the incorporation of local heterogeneities, similar to most native extracellular matrices.
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In vitro and in vivo acute response towards injectable thermosensitive chitosan/TEMPO-oxidized cellulose nanofiber hydrogel

TL;DR: The addition of TOCNF could significantly improve the biocompatibility of CS hydrogel as a biomaterial for biomedical application and resulted in faster gelation time and increased porosity.
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Development of a thermoresponsive chitosan gel combined with human mesenchymal stem cells and desferrioxamine as a multimodal pro-angiogenic therapeutic for the treatment of critical limb ischaemia.

TL;DR: The combination of hMSCs and DFO with a thermoresponsive chitosan/β-glycerophosphate gel resulted in a synergistic enhancement in bioactivity, as measured by increased VEGF expression in gel-exposed human umbilical vein endothelial cells.
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Recent Advances of Chitosan-Based Injectable Hydrogels for Bone and Dental Tissue Regeneration.

TL;DR: This review will highlight the current progress in the development of preparation methods, physicochemical properties and applications of CS-based injectable hydrogels and their perspectives in bone and dental regeneration, and is intended as starting point and inspiration for future research effort to develop the next generation of tissue-engineering scaffold materials.
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It's All in the Delivery: Designing Hydrogels for Cell and Non-viral Gene Therapies.

TL;DR: Recent advances in the development of hydrogels for cell and non-viral gene delivery are reviewed through understanding the design parameters, including both physical and biological components, on promoting transgene expression, cell engraftment, and ultimately cell function.
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