Scientists have developed a method of 3D printing new skin cells onto burn wounds at Wake Forest University's Military Research Center. The
method is far superior to traditional skin grafts because regular
grafts require skin from a donor site somewhere on the patient's body.
Taking skin from a donor site is painful and sometimes the patients do
not even have enough unburned skin to transplant.
Wake Forest accomplishes the skin printing by way of laser scanning
and a modified inkjet printer. The laser scans the patient's burn and
that information gets translated into a personalized plan for filling
the wound up with cells. Then the inkjet printer lays down the cells
individually, one layer at a time until the burned area is completely
covered.
cells |
They are already running clinical trials with mice at Wake Forest and
the results have been positive. The mice treated with the printed skin
cells healed two weeks faster than mice which did not receive the
treatment.
You can watch a video explaining Wake Forest's 3D bioprinting process below:
There is a Dutch company that is also working with 3D printers to treat burn wounds. The company is called SkinPrint. Instead of printing cells directly onto the victim's burn wounds they are working to create universal transplantable skin grafts. They are not as far along in their research as Wake Forest is, but it's in the works.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Click to see the code!
To insert emoticon you must added at least one space before the code.