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Additive manufacturing techniques for the production of tissue engineering constructs

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/term.1635

Keywords

additive manufacturing; solid freeform fabrication; tissue engineering; regenerative medicine; tissue and organ printing; scaffold

Funding

  1. NoE Expertissues (EU) [NMP3-CT-2004-500283]
  2. Hyanji Scaffold (EU) [PIRSES-GA-2008-230791]

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Additive manufacturing' (AM) refers to a class of manufacturing processes based on the building of a solid object from three-dimensional (3D) model data by joining materials, usually layer upon layer. Among the vast array of techniques developed for the production of tissue-engineering (TE) scaffolds, AM techniques are gaining great interest for their suitability in achieving complex shapes and microstructures with a high degree of automation, good accuracy and reproducibility. In addition, the possibility of rapidly producing tissue-engineered constructs meeting patient's specific requirements, in terms of tissue defect size and geometry as well as autologous biological features, makes them a powerful way of enhancing clinical routine procedures. This paper gives an extensive overview of different AM techniques classes (i.e. stereolithography, selective laser sintering, 3D printing, melt-extrusion-based techniques, solution/slurry extrusion-based techniques, and tissue and organ printing) employed for the development of tissue-engineered constructs made of different materials (i.e. polymeric, ceramic and composite, alone or in combination with bioactive agents), by highlighting their principles and technological solutions. Copyright (c) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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