Hybrid printing of mechanically and biologically improved constructs for cartilage tissue engineering applications
Forest Institute · Wake Forest University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Bioprinting is an emerging technique used to fabricate viable, 3D tissue constructs through the precise deposition of cells and hydrogels in a layer-by-layer fashion. Despite the ability to mimic the native properties of tissue, printed 3D constructs that are composed of naturally-derived biomaterials still lack structural integrity and adequate mechanical properties for use in vivo, thus limiting their development for use in load-bearing tissue engineering applications, such as cartilage. Fabrication of viable constructs using a novel multi-head deposition system provides the ability to combine synthetic polymers, which have higher mechanical strength than natural materials, with the favorable environment for…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Self-healing hydrogels
- Tissue engineering
- Materials science
- Electrospinning
- Polycaprolactone
- Nanotechnology
- Cartilage
- Flexibility (engineering)