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Cited 27 time in webofscience Cited 37 time in scopus
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3D Printing Technology Over a Drug Delivery for Tissue Engineering

Authors
Lee, Jin WooCho, Dong-Woo
Issue Date
Apr-2015
Publisher
BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
Keywords
3D printing; biomolecule; drug delivery system (DDS); scaffold; tissue engineering
Citation
CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN, v.21, no.12, pp.1606 - 1617
Journal Title
CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN
Volume
21
Number
12
Start Page
1606
End Page
1617
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/11907
DOI
10.2174/1381612821666150115125324
ISSN
1381-6128
Abstract
Many researchers have attempted to use computer-aided design (CAD) and computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) to realize a scaffold that provides a three-dimensional (3D) environment for regeneration of tissues and organs. As a result, several 3D printing technologies, including stereolithography, deposition modeling, inkjet-based printing and selective laser sintering have been developed. Because these 3D printing technologies use computers for design and fabrication, and they can fabricate 3D scaffolds as designed; as a consequence, they can be standardized. Growth of target tissues and organs requires the presence of appropriate growth factors, so fabrication of 3Dscaffold systems that release these biomolecules has been explored. A drug delivery system (DDS) that administrates a pharmaceutical compound to achieve a therapeutic effect in cells, animals and humans is a key technology that delivers biomolecules without side effects caused by excessive doses. 3D printing technologies and DDSs have been assembled successfully, so new possibilities for improved tissue regeneration have been suggested. If the interaction between cells and scaffold system with biomolecules can be understood and controlled, and if an optimal 3D tissue regenerating environment is realized, 3D printing technologies will become an important aspect of tissue engineering research in the near future.
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