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Extrusion bioprinting: meeting the promise of human tissue biofabrication?

I. Barry Holland

2025Progress in Biomedical Engineering11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Extrusion is the most popular bioprinting platform. Predictions of human tissue and whole-organ printing have been made for the technology. However, after decades of development, extruded constructs lack the essential microscale resolution and heterogeneity observed in most human tissues. Extrusion bioprinting has had little clinical impact with the majority of research directed away from the tissues most needed by patients. The distance between promise and reality is a result of technology hype and inherent design flaws that limit the shape, scale and survival of extruded features. By more widely adopting resolution innovations and softening its ambitions the biofabrication field could define a future for extrusion bioprinting that more closely aligns with its capabilities.

Topics & Concepts

BiofabricationExtrusionMicroscale chemistry3D bioprintingNanotechnologyComputer scienceMaterials scienceBiomedical engineeringTissue engineeringMedicineComposite materialMathematicsMathematics education3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Technologies
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