Points of views on electrochemical biosensing of COVID19

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Melt extrusion of thermoplastic materials is an important technique for fabricating tissue engineering scaffolds by additive manufacturing methods. Scaffold manufacturing is commonly achieved by one of the following extrusion-based techniques fused deposition modelling (FDM), 3D-fiber deposition (3DF), and bioextrusion. FDM needs the input material to be strictly in the form of a filament, whereas 3DF and bioextrusion can be used to process input material in several forms, such as pellets or powder. This chapter outlines a common workflow for all these methods, going from the material to a scaffold, while highlighting the special requirements of particular methods. A few ways of characterizing the scaffolds are also briefly described.Biofabrication is revolutionizing substitute tissue manufacturing. Skeletal stem cells (SSCs) can be blended with hydrogel biomaterials and printed to form three-dimensional structures that can closely mimic tissues of interest. Our bioink formulation takes into account the potential for cell printing including a bioink nanocomposite that contains low fraction polymeric content to facilitate cell encapsulation and survival, while preserving hydrogel integrity and mechanical properties following extrusion. Clay inclusion to the nanocomposite strengthens the alginate-methylcellulose network providing a biopaste with unique shear-thinning properties that can be easily prepared under sterile conditions. SSCs can be mixed with the clay-based paste, and the resulting bioink can be printed in 3D structures ready for implantation. In this chapter, we provide the methodology for preparation, encapsulation, and printing of SSCs in a unique clay-based bioink.The limited number of commercially available photocrosslinkable resins for stereolithography has often been considered the main limitation of this technique. In this manuscript, a photocrosslinkable poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL) has been synthesized by a two-step method starting from ring opening polymerization (ROP) of ε-caprolactone. Hydroxyethyl vinyl ether (HEVE) has been used both as the initiator of ROP and as photo-curable functional group to obtain a vinyl poly-ε-caprolactone (VPCL). The following reaction of VPCL with fumaryl chloride (FuCl) results in a divinyl-fumarate polycaprolactone (VPCLF). Moreover, a catalyst based on Al, instead of the most popular Tin(II) 2-ethylhexanoate, has been employed to reduce the cytotoxicity of the material. VPCLF has been successfully used, in combination with N-vinyl-pyrrolidone (NVP), to fabricate 3D porous scaffolds by micro-stereolithography (μ-SL) with mathematically defined architectures.Thanks to their unique advantages, additive manufacturing technologies are revolutionizing almost all sectors of the industrial and academic worlds, including tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. In particular, 3D bioprinting is rapidly emerging as a first-choice approach for the fabrication-in one step-of advanced cell-laden hydrogel constructs to be used for in vitro and in vivo studies. This technique consists in the precise deposition layer-by-layer of sub-millimetric hydrogel strands in which living cells are embedded. A key factor of this process consists in the proper formulation of the hydrogel precursor solution, the so-called bioink. Ideal bioinks should be able, on the one side, to support cell growth and differentiation and, on the other, to allow the high-resolution deposition of cell-laden hydrogel strands. The latter feature requires the extruded solution to instantaneously undergo a sol-gel transition to avoid its collapse after deposition.To address this challenge, researchers are recently focusing their attention on the synthesis of several derivatives of natural biopolymers to enhance their printability. Here, we present an approach for the synthesis of photocurable derivatives of natural biopolymers-namely, gelatin methacrylate, hyaluronic acid methacrylate, chondroitin sulfate methacrylate, and PEGylated fibrinogen-that can be used to formulate tailored innovative bioinks for coaxial-based 3D bioprinting applications.Scaffolds are often used in bioengineering to replace damaged tissues. They promote cell ingrowth and provide mechanical support until cells regenerate. Such scaffolds are often made using the additive manufacturing process, given its ability to create complex shapes, affordability, and the potential for patient-specific solutions. The success of the implant is closely related to the match of the scaffold mechanical properties to those of the host tissue. Many biological tissues show properties that vary in space. Therefore, the aim is to manufacture materials with variable properties, commonly referred to as functionally graded materials. Here we present a novel technique used to manufacture porous films with functionally graded properties using 3D printers. Such an approach exploits the control of a process parameter, without any hardware modification. The mechanical properties of the manufactured films have been experimentally tested and analytically characterized.A new generation of sophisticated tissue engineering scaffolds are developed using the periodicity of trigonometric equations to generate triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS). TPMS architectures display minimal surface energy that induce typical pore features and surface curvatures. Here we described a series of TPMS geometries and developed a procedure to build such scaffolds by stereolithography using biocompatible and biodegradable photosensitive resins.The design of optimized scaffolds for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine is a key topic of current research, as the complex macro- and micro-architectures required for scaffold applications depend not only on the mechanical properties but also on the physical and molecular queues of the surrounding tissue within the defect site. Thus, the prediction of optimal features for tissue engineering scaffolds is very important, for both its physical and biological properties.The relationship between high scaffold porosity and high mechanical properties is contradictory, as it becomes even more complex due to the scaffold degradation process. read more Biomimetic design has been considered as a viable method to design optimum scaffolds for tissue engineering applications. In this research work, the scaffold designs are based on biomimetic boundary-based bone micro-CT data. Based on the biomimetic boundaries and with the aid of topological optimization schemes, the boundary data and given porosity is used to obtain the initial scaffold designs.