Universal carrier ink developed for 3D printing of biomaterials
Researchers have created an innovative 3D printing carrier ink to drive the development of personalised biomaterials for cell and drug delivery.
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Researchers have created an innovative 3D printing carrier ink to drive the development of personalised biomaterials for cell and drug delivery.
Two companies have announced their partnership to work on the 3D printing of tablets for use in clinical trials.
Health Canada has published new guidance for manufacturers of higher-risk 3D-printed medical devices.
A 3D bioprinting technique could, in the future, allow the creation of human tissue structures for the analysis of various diseases...
The global pharmaceutical industry has been expanding steadily at varying rates of regional growth; the pace of growth being relatively slow in the developed, matured markets but rapid in developing nations...
3-D printing is an emerging technology that is impacting the way cardiologists treat patients with congenital heart disease...
Groundbreaking technology could help soldiers on the battlefield and people with skin disorders...
The concept of developing a bioink that can be used for all cell types and all printing techniques is at best unrealistic and at worst impossible. What is much more achievable and also more desirable is a modifiable, modular system...
A new technology could allow researchers to fit more biochemical probes onto a single biochip and reduce the cost of screening and analyzing changes associated with disease development...
Scientists have succeeded in printing 3D structures with living cells, this enables the production of micro building blocks that are viable and can be used for repairing damaged tissue...
Researchers have shown how they utilise 3D bioprinting to control the distribution of melanocytes on a biomimetic tissue substrate, to produce human-like skin pigmentation...
For the first time, researchers have shown that an optical fiber as thin as a human hair can be used to create microscopic structures with laser-based 3D printing.
A new 3D printing technique allows researchers to replicate biological structures, which could be used for tissue regeneration and replica organs...
Hot melt extrusion (HME), a manufacturing technique traditionally used in the plastic and food industries, is now attracting significant interest from the pharmaceutical manufacturing sector. This is primarily because HME enables the continuous manufacture of a wide variety of dosage formulations, including solid dose form, which is of particular importance…
Researchers believe they have a way to create the structural framework for growing living tissue using an off-the-shelf 3-D printer...