Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future

Organ printing technology could be defined as an automated, robotic and computeraided layer by layer additive biofabrication of functional 3D tissue and organ constructs using living tissue spheroids as building blocks. The concept of organ printing has been introduced a decade ago as a potentially...

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Main Authors: Rezende, Rodrigo A., Balashov, Sergey, Da Silva, Jorge V. L., Mironov, Vladimir, Kasyanov, Vladimir
Other Authors: Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2014)
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2016
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84269
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41739
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-842692020-09-24T20:14:54Z Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future Rezende, Rodrigo A. Balashov, Sergey Da Silva, Jorge V. L. Mironov, Vladimir Kasyanov, Vladimir Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2014) Singapore Centre for 3D Printing Organ printing technology could be defined as an automated, robotic and computeraided layer by layer additive biofabrication of functional 3D tissue and organ constructs using living tissue spheroids as building blocks. The concept of organ printing has been introduced a decade ago as a potentially superior alternative to conventional solid scaffold-based tissue engineering. The organ printing technology consists of three main steps: (i) pre-processing or design of blueprint for bioprinting of human organ; (ii) processing or actual 3D bioprinting using bioink or self-assembling tissue spheroids, biopaper or bioprintable, biocompatible and sacrificial hydrogel and bioprinter or automatic computer-aided robotic dispenser; and finally, (iii) postprocessing or bioreactor-based accelerated tissue maturation. During last decade 3D bioprinting technology has been advances and broadly recognized a new research paradigm and new exciting research direction in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Moreover, commercialization of 3D bioprinting technology is already an ongoing process. The design of next generation of 3D bioprinters and industrial scale complete organ biofabrication line will be presented and discussed. Published version 2016-12-07T05:20:43Z 2019-12-06T15:41:43Z 2016-12-07T05:20:43Z 2019-12-06T15:41:43Z 2014 Conference Paper Rezende, R. A., Balashov, S., Da Silva, J. V. L., Mironov, V., & Kasyanov, V. (2014). Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future. Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2014), 284-290. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84269 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41739 10.3850/978-981-09-0446-3_108 en © 2014 by Research Publishing Services. 7 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
description Organ printing technology could be defined as an automated, robotic and computeraided layer by layer additive biofabrication of functional 3D tissue and organ constructs using living tissue spheroids as building blocks. The concept of organ printing has been introduced a decade ago as a potentially superior alternative to conventional solid scaffold-based tissue engineering. The organ printing technology consists of three main steps: (i) pre-processing or design of blueprint for bioprinting of human organ; (ii) processing or actual 3D bioprinting using bioink or self-assembling tissue spheroids, biopaper or bioprintable, biocompatible and sacrificial hydrogel and bioprinter or automatic computer-aided robotic dispenser; and finally, (iii) postprocessing or bioreactor-based accelerated tissue maturation. During last decade 3D bioprinting technology has been advances and broadly recognized a new research paradigm and new exciting research direction in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Moreover, commercialization of 3D bioprinting technology is already an ongoing process. The design of next generation of 3D bioprinters and industrial scale complete organ biofabrication line will be presented and discussed.
author2 Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2014)
author_facet Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2014)
Rezende, Rodrigo A.
Balashov, Sergey
Da Silva, Jorge V. L.
Mironov, Vladimir
Kasyanov, Vladimir
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Rezende, Rodrigo A.
Balashov, Sergey
Da Silva, Jorge V. L.
Mironov, Vladimir
Kasyanov, Vladimir
spellingShingle Rezende, Rodrigo A.
Balashov, Sergey
Da Silva, Jorge V. L.
Mironov, Vladimir
Kasyanov, Vladimir
Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future
author_sort Rezende, Rodrigo A.
title Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future
title_short Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future
title_full Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future
title_fullStr Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future
title_full_unstemmed Organ Printing: Past, Present and Future
title_sort organ printing: past, present and future
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84269
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41739
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