WhatFinger

Scientists have developed a silk-based, 3-D printer ink for use in biomedical implants or tissue engineering.

Silk bio-ink could help advance tissue engineering with 3-D printers


Advances in 3-D printing have led to new ways to make bone and some other relatively simple body parts that can be implanted in patients. But finding an ideal bio-ink has stalled progress toward printing more complex tissues with versatile functions — tissues that can be loaded with pharmaceuticals, for example. Now scientists, reporting in the journal ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering, have developed a silk-based ink that could open up new possibilities toward that goal.
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