Download Bioprinting Presentation

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Problem
•How
to manipulate material on a nano scale effectively?
•Limited supply of organs and tissue donations.
Bioprinting!
What is it?
 Simply
a printer (yep…just like your
computer)


It is 3D though!
Live cells are layered to create an organic
structure
What is bio-ink and bio-paper?
Bio-ink and bio-paper
Bio-ink spheroid = aggregate of tens of thousands of
cultured cells.
Bio-paper gel = water and sugar based paper scaffold
made out of collagen, gelatin, or other hydrogel.
Where does the ink and
paper go?
•Works with three “ink”
compartments just like a
standard printer.
•Two compartments
for different cell
types and the third
for biopaper.
Can’t buy this ink at
OfficeMax
 The
cells used to make the bioink can
come from other animals (chickens have
been used before to make blood vessels).
 Patient’s own stem cells MUCH better.


Eliminates rejection from body.
Internal structures naturally form on their
own after printing has taken place.
Bioprinting in Action
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature
=player_embedded&v=g2ZTWHsO8l0
Bio Printing
Advantages
What can it do and how
can it do it?
The Ink



Can use polymers to create non living
material or use adult stem cells, as well as
embryonic cells, in the body as the ink to
build
Will be a large reduction of human immunorespons, because the cells are from the host’s
body
Future of organ transplants, veins, and
cartilage can be synthesized

IE using it for dialysis using AV graft.
Prosthetics For You
 Prosthetics
can now be a made to order
thing.
 They can also use moving parts,
increasing the realism of the prosthetic
 Use in bone repair and reconstruction

IE Columbia University and Dentistry
Making Drugs From Scratch
 Since
drugs are made up of organic
molecules, can use specific organic
synthesized molecules as in, thus making
drugs
 University of Glasglow has made
Ibprophin
Medical Revolution
 Change
in Clinical trials: Can create
specific organs to try out new
medications, thus resulting in the
elimination of animal testing.
 Future Surgical Procedures:


Instant organ replacement
Spray on or “print on” medical treatments
 IE
Skin, Wake Forest Medical School
What Are The “Extreme
Possibilities”
 Facial
reconstruction
 Life extension
 Industrial Convergence between doctors,
engineers and computer scientists
Complications
Fragility

Embryonic stem cells are fragile
 Mixture of adult and embryonic
 Mostly
 Adult
embryonic
stem cells are harder to
track down
 Embryonic can be cultured in a
lab
Structures

Certain organs are more
complicated than others
 Vascularization, internal
structure
 Cartilage may come soon
 Eventually bone, liver, etc.
Connections

Difficult to connect the bioprinted
tissue to the real tissue
 Blood vessels
 Currently the biggest issue
Rationale and Ethics


Will it promote risky activities?
 Extreme sports, dangerous
occupations, etc.
 Fast food, smoking, drugs, etc.
Overstaying our welcome?
 Regular body maintenance
(replacing old organs)
Check This Out !!!!
 ‘3D
Printing and the Future of Stuff’
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5YYP
JzeSj9Y
Sources
 http://www.explainingthefuture.com/biop
rinting.html
 “Bioprinting for stem cell research” Savas
Tasoglu and Utkan Demirci
 “Organ Printing” Callie Thomas