2016
DOI: 10.1088/1758-5090/8/1/013001
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Abstract: Biofabrication is an evolving research field that has recently received significant attention. In particular, the adoption of Biofabrication concepts within the field of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine has grown tremendously, and has been accompanied by a growing inconsistency in terminology. This article aims at clarifying the position of Biofabrication as a research field with a special focus on its relation to and application for Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine. Within this context… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
410
0
9

Year Published

2017
2017
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
5
3

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 550 publications
(420 citation statements)
references
References 22 publications
1
410
0
9
Order By: Relevance
“…[22,23] As described by Groll et al, the term biofabrication refers to the automated generation of products with biologic function by means of bioprinting or bioassembly and subsequent maturation processes. [24] More specifically, biofabrication approaches encompass living cells, cell aggregates, bioactive molecules, and biomaterials to generate biologically functional products in an automated and highly organized manner.…”
Section: The Rise Of the Third Dimensionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…[22,23] As described by Groll et al, the term biofabrication refers to the automated generation of products with biologic function by means of bioprinting or bioassembly and subsequent maturation processes. [24] More specifically, biofabrication approaches encompass living cells, cell aggregates, bioactive molecules, and biomaterials to generate biologically functional products in an automated and highly organized manner.…”
Section: The Rise Of the Third Dimensionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By combining biomaterials, cells, and/or growth factors (composites referred to as bioink) with automated fabrication processes such as additive manufacturing [the generation of 3D constructs in a layer-by-layer manner based on a CAD (computer-aided design)], it facilitates the generation of 3D bioengineered constructs with superior organization and more closely resembling native tissues. [22,23,24] This computer-controlled deposition of biologically relevant materials allows the fabrication of (multi)-cellular constructs. Besides, the layerby-layer architecture allows tailoring beyond the cellular level, namely in terms of materials, and biochemical cues, which could be optimized to meet cell-specific requirements.…”
Section: Organ-on-a-chip Technologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…La définition la plus large de la biofabrication est l'utilisation d'un procédé pour engendrer un produit présentant une fonction biologique. Dans le domaine de l'ingénierie tissulaire, la biofabrication recouvre la bio-impression et le bio-assemblage [13]. Ces deux techniques découlent d'une approche « bottom-up », contrairement à l'ingénierie tissulaire classique qui est d'inspiration « top-down ».…”
Section: L'impression 3dunclassified
“…Ces unités sont générées essentiellement à partir de techniques de micro-fluidique ou de moulage qui peuvent être couplées à l'impression 3D de maté-riaux [13]. …”
Section: Synthèse Revuesunclassified
“…The term biofabrication was widely discussed recently and is broadly used for tissue engineering and additive manufacturing as "the automated generation of biologically functional products with structural organization from living cells, bioactive molecules, biomaterials, cell aggregates such as micro-tissues or hybrid cell-material constructs, through Bioprinting or Bioassembly and subsequent tissue maturation processes" [1]. Undoubtedly, the current biofabrication initiatives are possible because of a set of technologies that are completely supported by information technology (IT), such as imaging, database, bioprinting technique [2], artificial intelligence (AI), software and hardware.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%