Three-dimensional (3D) bioprinting allows the production of artificial 3D cellular microenvironments thanks to the controlled spatial deposition of bioinks. Proper bioink characterization is required to achieve the essential characteristics of printability and biocompatibility for 3D bioprinting. In this work, a protocol to standardize the experimental characterization of a new bioink is proposed. A functionalized hydrogel based on gelatin and chitosan was used. The protocol was divided into three steps: pre-printing, 3D bioprinting, and post-printing. For the pre-printing step, the hydrogel formulation and its repeatability were evaluated. For the 3D-bioprinting step, the hydrogel-printability performance was assessed through qualitative a...
The selection of a suitable matrix material is crucial for the development of functional, biomimetic...
3D printing, an additive manufacturing based technology for precise 3D construction, is currently wi...
Bioinks of 3D bioprinting have significant potential application in the field of tissue engineering ...
The fabrication of 3D constructs using 3D bioprinting techniques aims ...
Three dimensional (3D) bioprinting technologies with appropriate bioinks are potentially able to fab...
Bioprinting is an emerging technology with various applications in making functional tissue construc...
Bioprinting is a process based on additive manufacturing from materials containing living cells. The...
Three-dimensional (3-D) bioprinting is the layer-by-layer deposition of biological material with the...
Bioprinting offers tremendous potential in the fabrication of functional tissue constructs for repla...
3D bioprinting involves the combination of 3D printing technologies with cells, growth factors and b...
Tissue regeneration using in-vitro scaffold becomes a vital mean to mimic the in-vivo counterpart du...
Bioprinting is an advanced fabrication approach to engineer complex living structures as the convent...
Bioprinting offers virtually limitless applications and possibly resolving the issue of organ reject...
A hybrid 3D bioprinting approach using porous microscaffolds and extrusion-based printing method is ...
3D bioprinting is an addictive manufacture method for 3D scaffold engineering used as a 3D template...
The selection of a suitable matrix material is crucial for the development of functional, biomimetic...
3D printing, an additive manufacturing based technology for precise 3D construction, is currently wi...
Bioinks of 3D bioprinting have significant potential application in the field of tissue engineering ...
The fabrication of 3D constructs using 3D bioprinting techniques aims ...
Three dimensional (3D) bioprinting technologies with appropriate bioinks are potentially able to fab...
Bioprinting is an emerging technology with various applications in making functional tissue construc...
Bioprinting is a process based on additive manufacturing from materials containing living cells. The...
Three-dimensional (3-D) bioprinting is the layer-by-layer deposition of biological material with the...
Bioprinting offers tremendous potential in the fabrication of functional tissue constructs for repla...
3D bioprinting involves the combination of 3D printing technologies with cells, growth factors and b...
Tissue regeneration using in-vitro scaffold becomes a vital mean to mimic the in-vivo counterpart du...
Bioprinting is an advanced fabrication approach to engineer complex living structures as the convent...
Bioprinting offers virtually limitless applications and possibly resolving the issue of organ reject...
A hybrid 3D bioprinting approach using porous microscaffolds and extrusion-based printing method is ...
3D bioprinting is an addictive manufacture method for 3D scaffold engineering used as a 3D template...
The selection of a suitable matrix material is crucial for the development of functional, biomimetic...
3D printing, an additive manufacturing based technology for precise 3D construction, is currently wi...
Bioinks of 3D bioprinting have significant potential application in the field of tissue engineering ...