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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    San Rafael [California] (40 Oak Drive, San Rafael, CA, 94903, USA) :Morgan & Claypool Publishers, | Bristol [England] (Temple Circus, Temple Way, Bristol BS1 6HG, UK) :IOP Publishing,
    UID:
    edoccha_9958130647002883
    Format: 1 online resource (various pagings) : , illustrations (some color).
    ISBN: 1-68174-143-1 , 0-7503-2796-0
    Series Statement: [IOP release 2]
    Content: This book introduces various 3D printing systems, biomaterials, and cells for organ printing. In view of the latest applications of several 3D printing systems, their advantages and disadvantages are also discussed. A basic understanding of the entire spectrum of organ printing provides pragmatic insight into the mechanisms, methods, and applications of this discipline. Organ printing is being applied in the tissue engineering field with the purpose of developing tissue/organ constructs for the regeneration of both hard (bone, cartilage, osteochondral) and soft tissues (heart). There are other potential application areas including tissue/organ models, disease/cancer models, and models for physiology and pathology, where in vitro 3D multicellular structures developed by organ printing are valuable.
    Note: "Version: 20151001"--Title page verso. , "A Morgan & Claypool publication as part of IOP Concise Physics"--Title page verso. , Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Author biography -- 1. Introduction , 2. Stereolithography-based 3D printing -- 2.1. System configurations -- 2.2. Photo-polymerization , 3. Inkjet-based 3D printing -- 3.1. Inkjet printing technology -- 3.2. 3D inkjet printing technology -- 3.3. 3D inkjet printing technique for creating 3D functional tissue/organ constructs -- 3.4. Conclusion , 4. Dispensing-based 3D printing -- 4.1. System configurations -- 4.2. Organ printing based on dispensing , 5. 3D printing software -- 5.1. Computer-aided scaffold architecture design -- 5.2. Automated printing path generation -- 5.3. Conclusion , 6. Biomaterials for organ printing -- 7. Natural, synthetic and semi-synthetic polymers -- 7.1. Natural polymers -- 7.2. Synthetic and semi-synthetic polymers , 8. Decellularized extracellular matrix (dECM) -- 8.1. Preparation of decellularized ECM bioinks -- 8.2. Properties of decellularized ECM bioinks -- 8.3. Significant progress for 3D printing application , 9. Tissue engineering: bone -- 10. Tissue engineering: cartilage (nose, ear and trachea) -- 10.1. 3D printing for cartilage tissue regeneration -- 10.2. Conclusion , 11. Tissue engineering: osteochondral tissue -- 12. Tissue engineering: soft tissue (the heart--cardiac muscle, cardiovascular tissue and heart valves) -- 12.1. Ischemic cardiac diseases -- 12.2. Heart valve -- 12.3. Coronary arteries , 13. In vitro tissue/organ models -- 14. Future work -- 14.1. Conclusions. , Also available in print. , Mode of access: World Wide Web. , System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781681740157
    Language: English
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