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Biomaterials and Their Biomedical Applications: From Replacement to Regeneration

Journal

PROCESSES
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr9111949

Keywords

biomaterials; biocompatibility; tissue engineering; artificial organs; regenerative medicine

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The history of biomaterials can be traced back to ancient times when humans used exogenous materials to facilitate wound healing and restore damaged tissues and organs. Nowadays, there is a wide variety of biomaterials available for both maintaining and restoring bodily functions, driven by emerging clinical needs.
The history of biomaterials dates back to the mists of time: human beings had always used exogenous materials to facilitate wound healing and try to restore damaged tissues and organs. Nowadays, a wide variety of materials are commercially available and many others are under investigation to both maintain and restore bodily functions. Emerging clinical needs forced the development of new biomaterials, and lately discovered biomaterials allowed for the performing of new clinical applications. The definition of biomaterials as materials specifically conceived for biomedical uses was raised when it was acknowledged that they have to possess a fundamental feature: biocompatibility. At first, biocompatibility was mainly associated with biologically inert substances; around the 1970s, bioactivity was first discovered and the definition of biomaterials was consequently extended. At present, it also includes biologically derived materials and biological tissues. The present work aims at walking across the history of biomaterials, looking towards the scientific literature published on this matter. Finally, some current applications of biomaterials are briefly depicted and their future exploitation is hypothesized.

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