Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Biomaterials Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Biomaterials

Application Of Inkjet Printing To Tissue Engineering, Thomas Boland, Tao Xu, Brook Damon, Xiaofeng Cui Dec 2005

Application Of Inkjet Printing To Tissue Engineering, Thomas Boland, Tao Xu, Brook Damon, Xiaofeng Cui

Thomas Boland

ecent advances in organ printing technology for applications relating to medical interventions and organ replacement are described. Organ printing refers to the placement of various cell types into a soft scaffold fabricated according to a computer-aided design template using a single device. Computer aided scaffold topology design has recently gained attention as a viable option to achieve function and mass transport requirements within tissue engineering scaffolds. An exciting advance pioneered in our laboratory is that of simultaneous printing of cells and biomaterials, which allows precise placement of cells and proteins within 3-D hydrogel structures. This advance raises the possibility of …


Viability And Electrophysiology Of Neural Cell Structures Generated By The Inkjet Printing Method, Tao Xu, Cassie Gregory, Peter Molnar, S Jalota, Sarit Bhaduri, Thomas Boland Dec 2005

Viability And Electrophysiology Of Neural Cell Structures Generated By The Inkjet Printing Method, Tao Xu, Cassie Gregory, Peter Molnar, S Jalota, Sarit Bhaduri, Thomas Boland

Thomas Boland

Complex cellular patterns and structures were created by automated and direct inkjet printing of primary embryonic hippocampal and cortical neurons. Immunostaining analysis and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings showed that embryonic hippocampal and cortical neurons maintained basic cellular properties and functions, including normal, healthy neuronal phenotypes and electrophysiological characteristics, after being printed through thermal inkjet nozzles. In addition, in this study a new method was developed to create 3D cellular structures: sheets of neural cells were layered on each other (layer-by-layer process) by alternate inkjet printing of NT2 cells and fibrin gels. These results and findings, taken together, show that inkjet printing …