Search results for " Tissue Engineering"

showing 10 items of 103 documents

Tissue engineering: how to build a heart

2015

Decellularization and recellularization of hearts from newly dead donors is the latest fashion in cardiac tissue engineering. The first paper came out in 2008 in Nature Medicine (Ott et al., 2008), and news has been recently published in Nature again in July 2013 (Maher, 2013). Brendan Maher in this paper summarizes and comments on the latest important results on decellularization of a human heart and explains the steps that are necessary to build a heart from a decellularized organ. Two sources may be used to obtain a decellularized heart: human and pig heart. Another issue to resolve is the time of decellularization, since the detergents used may also destroy the architecture of the organ…

ScaffoldPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyDecellularizationbusiness.industryPhysiologyGeneral CommentaryStem CellsCellular differentiationcardiac progenitor cellsCardiac tissue engineeringcardiac tissue engineeringTissue engineeringstem cellsPhysiology (medical)Cardiac progenitor cellsMedicinedecellularizationImplantProgenitor cellStem cellbusinessInduced pluripotent stem cellNeuroscienceFrontiers in Physiology
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Biomaterials and bioactive molecules to drive differentiation in striated muscle tissue engineering

2015

International audience; The generation of engineered tissues and organs has entered into the clinical practice in response to the chronic lack of organ donors. In particular, for the skeletal and cardiac muscles the translational potential of tissue engineering approaches has clearly been shown, even though the construction of these tissues lags behind others given the hierarchical, highly organized architecture of striated muscles. Failure of the cardiac tissue leads to cardiovascular diseases, which are the leading cause of death in the developed world (Di Felice et al., 2014). On the other hand, there are many clinical cases where the loss of skeletal muscle due to a traumatic injury, an…

Muscle tissueStriated muscle tissuePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyPhysiology030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyRegenerative MedicineRegenerative medicinelcsh:PhysiologyBiomaterials03 medical and health sciencescardiac tissue engineering0302 clinical medicineTissue engineeringPhysiology (medical)[SDV.BBM] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyMedicine[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biologyskeletal muscle030304 developmental biologyDenervation0303 health scienceslcsh:QP1-981Tissue Engineeringbusiness.industryRegeneration (biology)Editorial ArticleSkeletal musclevasculature nicheBiomaterial3. Good healthmedicine.anatomical_structureTraumatic injuryscaffoldscardiac tissue engineering; regenerative medicine; scaffolds; skeletal muscle; stem cell transplantation; vasculature nichebusinessStem Cell Transplantation
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Chemical hydrogels based on a hyaluronic acid-graft-α-elastin derivative as potential scaffolds for tissue engineering

2013

In this work hyaluronic acid (HA) functionalized with ethylenediamine (EDA) has been employed to graft α-elastin. In particular a HA-EDA derivative bearing 50 mol% of pendant amino groups has been successfully employed to produce the copolymer HA-EDA-g-α-elastin containing 32% w/w of protein. After grafting with α-elastin, remaining free amino groups reacted with ethylene glycol diglycidyl ether (EGDGE) for producing chemical hydrogels, proposed as scaffolds for tissue engineering. Swelling degree, resistance to chemical and enzymatic hydrolysis, as well as preliminary biological properties of HA-EDA-g-α-elastin/EGDGE scaffold have been evaluated and compared with a HA-EDA/EGDGE scaffold. T…

Materials scienceMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyBioengineeringBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundHydrolysisTissue engineeringEnzymatic hydrolysisHyaluronic acidPolymer chemistrymedicineAnimalsHumansHyaluronic AcidSkinbiologyTissue EngineeringTissue ScaffoldsHydrolysisHydrogelsFibroblastsGraftingElastinRatschemistryhydrogel hyaluronic acid elastin scaffold tissue engineeringMechanics of MaterialsSettore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoSelf-healing hydrogelsbiology.proteinMicroscopy Electron ScanningSwellingmedicine.symptomElastin
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Smart materials meet multifunctional biomedical devices:Current and prospective implications for nanomedicine

2017

With the increasing advances in the fabrication and in monitoring approaches of nanotechnology devices, novel materials are being synthesized and tested for the interaction with biological environments. Among them, smart materials in particular provide versatile and dynamically tunable platforms for the investigation and manipulation of several biological activities with very low invasiveness in hardly accessible anatomical districts. In the following, we will briefly recall recent examples of nanotechnology-based materials that can be remotely activated and controlled through different sources of energy, such as electromagnetic fields or ultrasounds, for their relevance to both basic scien…

HistologyComputer scienceMini Reviewlcsh:BiotechnologyBiomedical EngineeringBioengineeringNanotechnology02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistrySmart materialRemote stimulation01 natural sciencesdrug delivery; immune system; remote stimulation; smart materials; tissue engineeringlcsh:TP248.13-248.65Tissue engineeringSmart materialsBioengineering and Biotechnologyremote stimulation021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesimmune systemTissue targetingImmune systemsmart materialstissue engineeringdrug deliveryDrug deliveryNanomedicine0210 nano-technologyBiotechnology
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Micro-Architecture Based Structural Model for Elastomeric Electrospun Scaffolds.

2010

Elastomeric Electrospun Scaffolds Micro-Architecture Soft Tissue Engineering FEM analysi
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Three-Dimensional Bioprinting for Cartilage Tissue Engineering: Insights into Naturally-Derived Bioinks from Land and Marine Sources

2022

In regenerative medicine and tissue engineering, the possibility to: (I) customize the shape and size of scaffolds, (II) develop highly mimicked tissues with a precise digital control, (III) manufacture complex structures and (IV) reduce the wastes related to the production process, are the main advantages of additive manufacturing technologies such as three-dimensional (3D) bioprinting. Specifically, this technique, which uses suitable hydrogel-based bioinks, enriched with cells and/or growth factors, has received significant consideration, especially in cartilage tissue engineering (CTE). In this field of interest, it may allow mimicking the complex native zonal hyaline cartilage organiza…

Biomaterials3D bioprintingland sourcesBiomedical Engineeringcartilage tissue engineeringbioinkmarine sourcesadditive manufacturing
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Titanium Lattice Structures Produced via Additive Manufacturing for a Bone Scaffold: A Review

2023

The progress in additive manufacturing has remarkably increased the application of lattice materials in the biomedical field for the fabrication of scaffolds used as bone substitutes. Ti6Al4V alloy is widely adopted for bone implant application as it combines both biological and mechanical properties. Recent breakthroughs in biomaterials and tissue engineering have allowed the regeneration of massive bone defects, which require external intervention to be bridged. However, the repair of such critical bone defects remains a challenge. The present review collected the most significant findings in the literature of the last ten years on Ti6Al4V porous scaffolds to provide a comprehensive summa…

Biomaterialstitanium alloylattice structuresscaffoldsBiomedical Engineeringmechanical propertiesbone tissue engineeringadditive manufacturingJournal of Functional Biomaterials
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Using Polymeric Scaffolds for Vascular Tissue Engineering

2014

With the high occurrence of cardiovascular disease and increasing numbers of patients requiring vascular access, there is a significant need for small-diameter (<6 mm inner diameter) vascular graft that can provide long-term patency. Despite the technological improvements, restenosis and graft thrombosis continue to hamper the success of the implants. Vascular tissue engineering is a new field that has undergone enormous growth over the last decade and has proposed valid solutions for blood vessels repair. The goal of vascular tissue engineering is to produce neovessels and neoorgan tissue from autologous cells using a biodegradable polymer as a scaffold. The most important advantage of …

ScaffoldAutologous cellPolymers and PlasticsSettore BIO/16 - Anatomia Umanabusiness.industryVascular accessmedicine.diseaselcsh:Chemical technologySettore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneralePOLYMERIC SCAFFOLDS VASCULAR TISSUE ENGINEERING VASCULAR GRAFTSRestenosisTissue engineeringSettore BIO/13 - Biologia ApplicatamedicineVascular tissue engineeringInner diameterlcsh:TP1-1185businessVascular graftBiomedical engineeringInternational Journal of Polymer Science
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Perinatal and Wharton's jelly-derived mesenchymal stem cells in cartilage regenerative medicine and tissue engineering strategies

2011

Stem cells can be found in embryonic and extraembryonic tissues as well as in adult organs. In particular, research in the last few years has delineated the key features of perinatal stem cells derived from fetus-associated tissues. These cells show multiple differentiation potential, can be easily expanded ex vivo, and raise no ethical concerns as regards their use. Several reports indicate that cells isolated from Wharton's jelly (WJ), the main component of umbilical cord extracellular matrix, are multipotent stem cells that express markers shared by other mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) and give rise to different mature cell types belonging to all three germ layers. Moreover, WJ-MSC display…

Settore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaMesenchymal stem cellClinical uses of mesenchymal stem cellsBiologyRegenerative medicineCell biologyDevelopmental NeuroscienceMultipotent Stem CellWharton's jellyImmunologyArticular cartilage Chondrocytes Differentiation markers Extracellular matrix Mesenchymal stem cells scaffolds Tissue engineering Umbilical cord Wharton’s jellyStem cellDevelopmental BiologyStem cell transplantation for articular cartilage repairAdult stem cell
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Incremental Gaussian Discriminant Analysis based on Graybill and Deal weighted combination of estimators for brain tumour diagnosis

2011

In the last decade, machine learning (ML) techniques have been used for developing classifiers for automatic brain tumour diagnosis. However, the development of these ML models rely on a unique training set and learning stops once this set has been processed. Training these classifiers requires a representative amount of data, but the gathering, preprocess, and validation of samples is expensive and time-consuming. Therefore, for a classical, non-incremental approach to ML, it is necessary to wait long enough to collect all the required data. In contrast, an incremental learning approach may allow us to build an initial classifier with a smaller number of samples and update it incrementally…

Graybill-Deal estimatorDatabases FactualComputer sciencePopulation-based incremental learningGaussianTraining setsHealth InformaticsMachine learningcomputer.software_genreIncremental algorithmPersonalizationsymbols.namesakeAutomatic brain tumour diagnosisArtificial IntelligenceNumber of samplesMachine learningMagnetic resonance spectroscopyHumansPreprocessIncremental learningTraining setbusiness.industryBrain NeoplasmsBrain tumoursEstimatorComputational BiologyPattern recognitionLinear discriminant analysisMagnetic Resonance ImagingDiscriminant analysisTranslational research Tissue engineering and pathology [ONCOL 3]Graybill–Deal estimatorComputer Science ApplicationsGaussiansMagnetic resonanceFISICA APLICADAIncremental learningsymbolsEmpirical resultsArtificial intelligencebusinessClassifier (UML)computerEstimationAlgorithmsJournal of Biomedical Informatics
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